The Siamese Twins: A Satirical Tale of the Times. With Other PoemsH. Colburn and R. Bentley, 1831 - 390 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 34
Page 14
... rest . And in the pause , and thro ' the dark , You heard the mother's quiet weeping . -Out rang a sharp and wailing cry From where the Twins were lain , And from their first and gentlest sleeping They woke to earth and pain ! As snows ...
... rest . And in the pause , and thro ' the dark , You heard the mother's quiet weeping . -Out rang a sharp and wailing cry From where the Twins were lain , And from their first and gentlest sleeping They woke to earth and pain ! As snows ...
Page 40
... Rest ! As birds that seek athwart the main , Strange lands where happier seasons reign , Where to soft airs the rich leaf danceth , And laughs the gay beam where it glanceth— Glancing o'er fruits whose purpling sheen May court the ...
... Rest ! As birds that seek athwart the main , Strange lands where happier seasons reign , Where to soft airs the rich leaf danceth , And laughs the gay beam where it glanceth— Glancing o'er fruits whose purpling sheen May court the ...
Page 41
... rest . The broad Sea with its aching sound , The desert Heaven , —have girt them round . On , on ! -- and still the promised shore Seems far -- and faithless as before ; And some desponding droop behind , And some are scattered by the ...
... rest . The broad Sea with its aching sound , The desert Heaven , —have girt them round . On , on ! -- and still the promised shore Seems far -- and faithless as before ; And some desponding droop behind , And some are scattered by the ...
Page 42
... rest We drop - the Victim or the Guest ; And after all our wanderings past , Feel Death has something sweet at last . END OF CHAPTER II . BOOK I. BOOK THE FIRST . CHAPTER III . ARGUMENT . Address 42 [ BOOK I. THE SIAMESE TWINS .
... rest We drop - the Victim or the Guest ; And after all our wanderings past , Feel Death has something sweet at last . END OF CHAPTER II . BOOK I. BOOK THE FIRST . CHAPTER III . ARGUMENT . Address 42 [ BOOK I. THE SIAMESE TWINS .
Page 65
... rest ; His mute form bending musingly , And his hands clasp'd upon his knee . Calmness sate round him like a robe , The calmness of the crowned Dead , The calmness of the solemn Globe When Night makes Silence dread . The calmness of ...
... rest ; His mute form bending musingly , And his hands clasp'd upon his knee . Calmness sate round him like a robe , The calmness of the crowned Dead , The calmness of the solemn Globe When Night makes Silence dread . The calmness of ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Almack's Anaxagoras aught Bancok beauty behold beneath BOOK breast breath bright brother brow calm Chang and Ching Chang's CHAPTER charm cheek chimæras cloud Cochin China crowd dark deep divine doom dread dream earth Ev'n eyes fancy Fate fear feel Fiam gaze glad glide gloom glory Grahana grave grey hath haunt heart Heaven Hodges hope hour Idlesse Julian Lady Laneham Leonora Baroni life's light lips lonely look Lord Byron lover memory Mice mind moon Muse mystery mystic tidings ne'er never night o'er once passion pause quiet Rats Religio Medici round sate scarce shade shame Siam Siamese silent sleep smile soft solemn sought soul spirit star stern strange sweet Syrian music thee thine things thou thought thro tide trembling truth Twas Twins vex'd voice wandering wave ween whate'er WILBrooke wild wing wrath youth
Popular passages
Page 353 - CYRIACK, this three years' day these eyes, though clear, To outward view, of blemish or of spot, Bereft of light, their seeing have forgot ; Nor to their idle orbs doth sight appear Of sun, or moon, or star, throughout the year, Or man, or woman. Yet I argue not Against Heaven's hand or will, nor bate a jot Of heart or hope, but still bear up and steer Right onward.
Page 319 - In saffron robe, with taper clear, And pomp, and feast, and revelry, With mask, and antique pageantry; Such sights as youthful poets dream On summer eves by haunted stream.
Page 359 - Thus with the year Seasons return, but not to me returns Day, or the sweet approach of even or morn, Or sight of vernal bloom, or summer's rose, Or flocks, or herds, or human face divine: But cloud instead, and ever-during dark Surrounds me...
Page 317 - The design of this poem," says Sir EB Lytton, in a prefatory note, " is that of a picture. It is intended to portray the great patriot poet in the three cardinal divisions of life — youth, manhood, and age. The first part is founded upon the well-known though ill-authenticated tradition of the Italian lady or ladies seeing Milton asleep under a tree in the gardens of his college, and leaving some tributary verses beside the sleeper. Taking full advantage of this legend, and presuming to infer from...
Page 359 - To hoarse or mute, though fallen on evil days, On evil days though fallen and evil tongues ; In darkness, and with dangers compassed round And solitude ; yet not alone while thou £ Visit'st my slumbers nightly, or when morn Purples the east...
Page 324 - Like angel-strangers, o'er her raptured soul ; For she was of the poet's golden land, Where thought finds happiest voice, and glides along Into the silver rivers of sweet song.
Page 322 - And beauty reigned along each faultless limb — The lavish beauty of the olden day, Ere with harsh toil our mortal mould grew dim — When gods who sought for true-love met him here, And the veil'd Dian lost her lonely sphere — And her proud name of chaste, for him whose sleep Drank in Elysium on the Latmos steep. Nor without solemn dream, or vision bright, The bard for whom Urania left the shore — The viewless shore where never sleeps the light, Or fails the voice of music ; and bequeath'd...
Page 260 - Yet, in the whole, who paused to look again, Saw more than marks the crowd of vulgar men; They gaze and marvel how - and still confess That thus it is, but why they cannot guess.
Page 158 - I've always heard, Preserved his wrath and kept his word, And sternly left to other chances Of love and conquest, Lady Frances — Wherefore beware, ye girls who charm us, How you 're alarmed, or how alarm us ; Nor if you wish for life to suit us, Send men — you take the hint — to shoot us ! And now our brothers Bond Street enter ; — Dear street of London's charms the centre Dear street ! — where at a certain hour Man's follies bud forth into flower ! Where the gay minor sighs for fashion...
Page 324 - O'er her smooth brow, and the sweet Air just moved Their vine-like beauty with his gentle wing ; The earliest bloom of youth's Idalian rose Blushed through the Tuscan olive of her cheek — (So through the lightest clouds does morning break) — And there shone forth that hallowing soul which glows Round beauty, like the circling light on high, Which decks and makes the glory of the sky. Breathless and motionless she stood awhile, And drank deep draughts of passion — then a smile Played on her...