Shakespeare's Funeral and Other PapersW. Blackwood, 1889 - 311 pages |
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Page 77
... evidently made use of , the water in the basin is still pellucid , with no soap apparent either superficially or in solution ? This oversight I should not have expected in so clever an artist . Even granting clearness to the water , the ...
... evidently made use of , the water in the basin is still pellucid , with no soap apparent either superficially or in solution ? This oversight I should not have expected in so clever an artist . Even granting clearness to the water , the ...
Page 79
... evidently belongs to the owner of the little white - walled cottage in the middle distance , the smoke from whose chimney curls bluely up- ward against a sky which has in itself nothing remarkable , but which the late J. M. W .. Tur ...
... evidently belongs to the owner of the little white - walled cottage in the middle distance , the smoke from whose chimney curls bluely up- ward against a sky which has in itself nothing remarkable , but which the late J. M. W .. Tur ...
Page 87
... evidently bear no end of explanation . Theories the most ingenious are brought to bear upon it ; it is obscured for a moment , every now and then , in a haze of cloud or gossamer ; but the 1 ' Les Miserables . ' By Victor Hugo . Vol ...
... evidently bear no end of explanation . Theories the most ingenious are brought to bear upon it ; it is obscured for a moment , every now and then , in a haze of cloud or gossamer ; but the 1 ' Les Miserables . ' By Victor Hugo . Vol ...
Page 110
... evidently getting serious . The Prussians thrown into the Rhine , the English impartially cast into the sea , the whole world at Napoleon's feet , Fate naturally asks , What next ? The conqueror and his army must find employment and ...
... evidently getting serious . The Prussians thrown into the Rhine , the English impartially cast into the sea , the whole world at Napoleon's feet , Fate naturally asks , What next ? The conqueror and his army must find employment and ...
Page 128
... evidently about as hopeful to look for poetry in this as in the versification of the bard's weekly washing- bills . Accordingly , the simplicity we find here has far overstepped the line which should divide it from childishness and ...
... evidently about as hopeful to look for poetry in this as in the versification of the bard's weekly washing- bills . Accordingly , the simplicity we find here has far overstepped the line which should divide it from childishness and ...
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Common terms and phrases
Adam Bede admiration appears artist battle battle of Waterloo better Blackwood Blucher Bulwer Byron called character clever cuirassiers Doctor Hall doubt Doyle dragon elves evidently fairy fame fancy father French genius George Eliot give grave hath Hayward heard hero Hicks Pasha honour Hostess Hougomont Hugo human imagination interest Kilve kind Laodamia less Lewes literary live look Lord married Master Drayton Master Shake Master Shakespeare mind Mistress Hall Mont St Jean Napoleon nature never novel opinion Othello painted passed Peelites perhaps personages picture play poem poet poetry present probably Raleigh reader religion Richard Doyle scenes seems seen sense Shake Sherlock Sir Thomas slaughtered lord soul speare speech spirit stanza Stratford tale tell thee thou thought tion told twas Victor Hugo Waterloo Wellington woman writings young youth
Popular passages
Page 115 - found in huts where poor men lie, His daily teachers had been woods and rills, The silence that is in the starry sky, The sleep that is among the lonely hills." Such was what the bard of Rydal did at his best; but, absorbed in the sense which
Page 135 - That which her slender waist confined Shall now my joyful temples bind : Xo monarch but would give his crown His arms might do what this has done." That Mr Palgrave finds a charm in bald and mawkish simplicity, there is evidence
Page 15 - N"o longer mourn for me when I am dead Than ye shall hear the surly sullen bell Give -warning to the world that I am fled." * How strange sound these words of his, with that bell for commentary! How his own phrases rise to the lips! Drayton. Ay, Walter, you shall find but few occasions in life, solemn or merry, regarding
Page 121 - in hallowed mould Thy corpse shall buried be: For thee a funeral bell shall ring, And all the congregation sing A Christian psalm for thee." Certainly the poor woman had done nothing to cause her to be denied decent burial; but what there is in this or any part of the dismal,
Page 137 - many fine lines and stanzas, decorating a very slender fabric. The drift of Porphyro's " stratagem," as explained to old Angela, is far from clear— " Which was, to lead him, in close secrecy, Even to Madeline's chamber, and there hide Him in a closet, of such privacy That he might see her beauty unespied, And win perhaps that night a peerless bride;
Page 138 - fell on her hands together prest, And on her silver cross soft amethyst, And on her hair a glory, like a saint: She seemed a splendid angel, newly drest, Save wings for heaven." Now, considering that the poet had given himself an unlimited range of colours to choose from, he has shown an extraordinary incapacity to make use of the opportunity. On her breast is thrown
Page 114 - Thus, all in vain exhorted and reproved, She perished; and as for a wilful crime, By the just gods whom no weak pity moved, Was doomed to wear out her appointed time, Apart from happy Ghosts that gather flowers Of blissful quiet 'mid unfading bowers.'
Page 24 - Let's talk of graves, of worms, and epitaphs; Make dust our paper, and with rainy eyes Write sorrow on the bosom of the earth.
Page 125 - this queer personification with its balance. Afterwards Napoleon is exhorted, not too grammatically, to commit suicide without further delay:— " Unless, like he of Babylon, All sense is with thy sceptre gone, Life will not long confine That spirit poured so widely forth— So long obeyed—so little worth
Page 250 - Such a man leaves behind him a wider good than the loss of his personal presence can take away. "' The greatest gift the hero leaves his race, Is to have been a hero.' " I must be excused for quoting my own words, because they are my credo.