The Poetical Works of Lord Byron: With a Memoir, Volume 5Hurd and Houghton, 1879 |
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Page 10
... find nothing in it that could be likely to be re- garded as actionable . Some , while they war against religion , pay homage to morality ; and others , while they subvert all morals , cant about religion ; Lord Byron displays at once ...
... find nothing in it that could be likely to be re- garded as actionable . Some , while they war against religion , pay homage to morality ; and others , while they subvert all morals , cant about religion ; Lord Byron displays at once ...
Page 11
... find much more to commend than to censure . " Among the Monthly critics , we give the first place to the IX . MONTHLY REVIEW . " Don Juan is a poem , which , if originality and variety be the surest test of genius , has certainly the ...
... find much more to commend than to censure . " Among the Monthly critics , we give the first place to the IX . MONTHLY REVIEW . " Don Juan is a poem , which , if originality and variety be the surest test of genius , has certainly the ...
Page 24
... find a flaw in it . I will make him neither a dandy in town , nor a fox - hunter in the country . He shall get into all sorts of scrapes , and at length end his career in France . Poor Juan shall be guillotined in the French Revolution ...
... find a flaw in it . I will make him neither a dandy in town , nor a fox - hunter in the country . He shall get into all sorts of scrapes , and at length end his career in France . Poor Juan shall be guillotined in the French Revolution ...
Page 33
... find the following passage , - with which let these prolegomena conclude . XXX . BYRON ipse ( apud Kennedy ) . " I cannot , " said Lord Byron , " conceive why people will al- ways mix up my own character and opinions with those of the ...
... find the following passage , - with which let these prolegomena conclude . XXX . BYRON ipse ( apud Kennedy ) . " I cannot , " said Lord Byron , " conceive why people will al- ways mix up my own character and opinions with those of the ...
Page 34
... find them in real life . " " This may be true ; but the question is , what are your motives and object for painting nothing but scenes of vice and folly ? " - " To remove the cloak , which the manners and max- ims of society , " said ...
... find them in real life . " " This may be true ; but the question is , what are your motives and object for painting nothing but scenes of vice and folly ? " - " To remove the cloak , which the manners and max- ims of society , " said ...
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Common terms and phrases
Adeline Baba beauty blood called CANTO Cavalier Servente charm chaste Childe Harold Circassian Courland death deem devil Don Juan doubt dream Duc de Richelieu Dudù e'er earth eunuch eyes fair fame feelings gazed gentle Giaour glory grace Gulbeyaz Haidée hath head heard heart heaven hero Hist hour human human clay Juan's Julia kind king knew lady late least leave less light live look Lord Byron LXXXIII marriage mind moral Muse ne'er never night nought o'er once passed passion Perhaps poem poet pretty Prince de Ligne rhyme Samian wine scarce seemed seen sigh sleep smile soul spirit stood strange sublime Suwarrow sweet tears tell there's things thou thought true truth turn Twas virtue Voltaire whate'er wish women words young youth