A Review of the Character and Writings of Lord ByronSherwood Gilbert and Piper, 1826 - 158 pages |
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Page 22
... o'er the fond recollection , And sigh for the friend who was formerly yours . For the present , we part , -I will hope not for ever , For time and regret will restore you at last ; To forget our dissension we both should endeavour , I ...
... o'er the fond recollection , And sigh for the friend who was formerly yours . For the present , we part , -I will hope not for ever , For time and regret will restore you at last ; To forget our dissension we both should endeavour , I ...
Page 23
... O'er roses may your footsteps move , Your smiles be ever smiles of love , Your tears be tears of joy . Oh ! if you wish , that happiness Your coming days and years may bless , And virtues crown your brow ; Be , still , as you were wont ...
... O'er roses may your footsteps move , Your smiles be ever smiles of love , Your tears be tears of joy . Oh ! if you wish , that happiness Your coming days and years may bless , And virtues crown your brow ; Be , still , as you were wont ...
Page 24
... Yes , as you knew me in the days , O'er which Remembrance yet delays , Still may I rove , untutor'd , wild , And even in age , at heart a child . Other similar passages might be quoted . But with all 24 CHARACTER AND WRITINGS.
... Yes , as you knew me in the days , O'er which Remembrance yet delays , Still may I rove , untutor'd , wild , And even in age , at heart a child . Other similar passages might be quoted . But with all 24 CHARACTER AND WRITINGS.
Page 25
... ! Though gay companions , o'er the bowl , Dispel awhile the sense of ill , Though pleasure stirs the maddening soul , The heart - the heart is lonely still . How dull to hear the voice of those , Whom OF LORD BYRON . 25.
... ! Though gay companions , o'er the bowl , Dispel awhile the sense of ill , Though pleasure stirs the maddening soul , The heart - the heart is lonely still . How dull to hear the voice of those , Whom OF LORD BYRON . 25.
Page 50
... o'er the mountains he Did take his way in solitary guise ; Sweet was the scene , yet soon he thought to flee , More restless than the swallow in the skies ; Though here awhile he learn'd to moralise , For Meditation fix'd at times on ...
... o'er the mountains he Did take his way in solitary guise ; Sweet was the scene , yet soon he thought to flee , More restless than the swallow in the skies ; Though here awhile he learn'd to moralise , For Meditation fix'd at times on ...
Other editions - View all
REVIEW OF THE CHARACTER & WRIT Andrews 1786-1853 Norton,Willard 1784-1873 Phillips No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
adapted to produce admiration affection agony appears Bards and Scotch beautiful breath Cain cantos of Childe Captain Medwin cation CHARACTER AND WRITINGS Childe Harold contempt Dallas dark dead death depravity disgust display Don Juan dread earth Edinburgh Review English Bards eternal evil expression extract fame favour feeling felt friends Giaour give Greece hath heart heaven hope human images imagination lady language latter Leigh Hunt libertine light likewise Lord Byron mankind melancholy ment mind misanthropy moral mother mountains Muse nature Niobe o'er object Old Bailey once passage passions pleasure poem poet poetical poetry Pope possessed praise prose racter regard render roar Satirist scene Scotch Reviewers seems senti sentiment Siege of Corinth soul spirit stanza striking strong sublimity sufferings sympathy taste tear thee thine things thou thought Tiber tion truth verses vices virtues waves written youth