| John Watts De Peyster - Menapii - 1858 - 578 pages
...alii, (Camliri) Welshmen. Page 286, 2d line after "campaign," insert — "Sound, sound the clarion, fill the fife ! To all the sensual world proclaim,...of glorious life Is worth an age without a name." Page 293, line 8, after "Century," insert a *, and add as a note, "TiiE POPKS OF THE XV'TH CENTURY... | |
| M E. Hammond - 1858 - 352 pages
...England's history — such lives are golden waymarks in the march of ages — "'Sound, sound the clarion, fill the fife, To all the sensual world proclaim,...hour of glorious life, Is worth an age without a name !' Ah, Florence, we live an age, ages too late ! ' Our bright eyes rain no influence' on the carpet-knights... | |
| James White - Authors, Scottish - 1858 - 316 pages
...gentleman. This is a race worth running — a reputation worth dying for. Sound, sound the clarion ! fill the fife ! To all the sensual world proclaim,...hour of glorious life Is worth an age without a name ! And this is the moral to be drawn frorfl all we have said ; that Genius requires to be combined with... | |
| Walter Scott - 1859 - 390 pages
...extreme violence, if not from actual destruction. CHAPTER THE THIRTY-FOURTH. Sound, sound the clarion, fill the fife ! To all the sensual world proclaim,...hour of glorious life Is worth an age without a name. ANONYMOUS. WHEN the desperate affray had ceased, Claverhouse commanded his soldiers to remove the dead... | |
| John Edmund Reade - 1859 - 340 pages
...their leader. I should ever remember those noble lines of the poet : — " Sound, sound the clarion, fill the fife, To all the sensual world proclaim,...hour of glorious life Is worth an age without a name ! " As Pearl recited these lines with the fervour of a prophetess, or as one inspired, it would have... | |
| James Ballantine - 1859 - 630 pages
...are the best commentary upon his own lines — " Tlicn, sound the trumpet, fill tbe fife. And to tlie sensual world proclaim — One crowded hour of glorious life Is worth an age without a name.1' Well may we be proud. Sir, that a man great in so many walks — the great minstrel, and the... | |
| James Grant Wilson - Illinois - 1862 - 202 pages
...travers le fer, le feu des battalllons Courons a la victoire! CASIMIR DE LA VIGNE. Sound the clarion, fill the fife, To all the sensual world proclaim—...hour of glorious life Is worth an age without a name. SIR WALTER SCOTT. . . . . . . *..* *,,*,, , , . * . To t&¡ Vero'. Villen his VVV'' - - " -" , lias... | |
| John Gibson Lockhart - 1862 - 356 pages
...; and if it shortened them, let us remember his own immortal words, — " Sound, sound the clarion, fill the fife, To all the sensual world proclaim —...crowded hour of glorious life Is worth an age without a nanle." For the rest, I presume, it will be allowed that no human character, which we have the opportunity... | |
| James Grant Wilson - Illinois - 1862 - 212 pages
...le feu des hattalllons Courons a la victoire! CASIMIR UE LA VIOHE. Sound the clarion, fill the Ufe, To all the sensual world proclaim— One crowded hour of glorious life Is worth an age without a name. SIR WALTER SCOTT. To the hero, when his sword lias won the battle of the free, Death's voice sounds... | |
| Walter Scott - 1863 - 328 pages
...him from extreme violence, if not from actual destruction. CHAPTER XXXIV. Sound, sound the clarion, fill the fife ! To all the sensual world proclaim,...hour of glorious life Is worth an age without a name. ANONYMOUS. WHEN the desperate affray had ceased, Claverhouse commanded his soldiers to remove the dead... | |
| |