A Selection from the Works of Lord ByronEdward Moxon & Company, 1866 - 244 pages |
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Results 1-5 of 70
Page
... spirit of Byron assume colour and shape . His noblest verse leapt on a sudden into life after the heaviest evils had fallen upon him which even he ever underwent . From the beginning indeed he had much to fight against and three ...
... spirit of Byron assume colour and shape . His noblest verse leapt on a sudden into life after the heaviest evils had fallen upon him which even he ever underwent . From the beginning indeed he had much to fight against and three ...
Page vii
... spirit of Byron assume colour and shape . His noblest verse leapt on a sudden into life after the heaviest evils had fallen upon him which even he ever underwent . From the beginning indeed he had much to fight against and three ...
... spirit of Byron assume colour and shape . His noblest verse leapt on a sudden into life after the heaviest evils had fallen upon him which even he ever underwent . From the beginning indeed he had much to fight against and three ...
Page xi
... spirit of Byron assume colour and shape . His noblest verse leapt on a sudden into life after the heaviest evils had fallen upon him which even he ever underwent . From the beginning indeed he had much to fight against and three ...
... spirit of Byron assume colour and shape . His noblest verse leapt on a sudden into life after the heaviest evils had fallen upon him which even he ever underwent . From the beginning indeed he had much to fight against and three ...
Page xiii
... and sleepless spirit . The godless martyrdom of rebels ; the passion that cannot redeem ; the Thebaid whose first hermit was Cain , the Calvary whose first martyr was Satan ; these , time after time , allured PREFACE . xiii.
... and sleepless spirit . The godless martyrdom of rebels ; the passion that cannot redeem ; the Thebaid whose first hermit was Cain , the Calvary whose first martyr was Satan ; these , time after time , allured PREFACE . xiii.
Page xiv
... " he was never able to bring two speakers face to face and supply them with the right words . In struc- ture as in metre his elaborate tragedies are wholly condemnable ; filled as they are in spirit with the xiv PREFACE .
... " he was never able to bring two speakers face to face and supply them with the right words . In struc- ture as in metre his elaborate tragedies are wholly condemnable ; filled as they are in spirit with the xiv PREFACE .
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Common terms and phrases
AHOLIBAMAH AMBRACIAN GULF Anah angels appear'd Asmodeus beauty behold beneath blood breast breath brow Byron chain CHILDE HAROLD'S PILGRIMAGE clay clime clouds damn'd dark dead death deep Don Juan dream dust earth EDWARD MOXON EPISTLE TO AUGUSTA eternal eyes face fair father feel flowers foam gazed GIAOUR glory gone grave grew Haidée hand hath heart heaven hell hope hour human clay immortal Japh knew less light live look look'd Michael Molière mortal mountains ne'er never night o'er ocean once pass'd passion Pedrillo perish'd poem poets praise round Saint Peter SAME.-CANTO Samian wine Satan seem'd shore sigh silent skies sleep son of Noah soul spirit STANZAS stars sweet tears thee thine things thou art thought turn'd Twas verse voice walls waters wave weep wind wings young