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" Which in a palace had grown cold, Had his free breathing been denied The range of the steep mountain's side ; But why delay the truth? — he died. "
Lord Byron - Page 94
by Louise Swanton-Belloc - 1824
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Adventures of Alf. Wilson: A Thrilling Episode of the Dark Days of the Rebellion

John Alfred Wilson - Chattanooga Railroad Expedition, 1862 - 1897 - 290 pages
...Probable Result "Onr bread was such as captives' tears Have moisten'd many u thousand yearf* Bince man first pent his fellow men Like brutes within an iron den." \ HE blow fell with greater weight upon some of the doomed men from the fact they had built such strong...
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The Prisoner of Chillon and Other Poems

George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1898 - 112 pages
...goat Was changed for water from the moat, Our bread was such as captive's tears l35 Have moistened many a thousand years, Since man first pent his fellow men Like brutes within an iron den; But what were these to us or him ? These wasted not his heart or limb; MO My brother's soul was of...
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Scribner's Popular History of the United States: From the Earliest ..., Volume 3

William Cullen Bryant, Sydney Howard Gay, Noah Brooks - United States - 1898 - 716 pages
...Pri"oner8 York, were notorious at the time, and have long been famous in the annals of cruelty, — " Since man first pent his fellow men Like brutes within an iron den." A writer in the New London " Gazette " gave an account of their treatment, writing it down from the...
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British Poets of the Nineteenth Century: Selections from Wordsworth ...

Curtis Hidden Page - English poetry - 1904 - 942 pages
...from the mountain goat Was changed for water from the moat. Our bread was such as captives' tears Have alled upon to exercise their skill, Not in Utopia, subterranean fields. Or some secreted island, He ; But what were these to us or him ? These wasted not his heart or limb ; My brother's soul was of...
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The Principles and Progress of English Poetry

Charles Mills Gayley, Clement Calhoun Young - English poetry - 1904 - 770 pages
...water from the moat, Our bread was such as captives' tears Have moisten'd many a thousand years, 135 Since man first pent his fellow men Like brutes within an iron den; But what were these to us or him ? These wasted not his heart or limb; My brother's soul was of that...
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The Principles and Progress of English Poetry

Charles Mills Gayley, Clement Calhoun Young - English poetry - 1904 - 726 pages
...water from the moat, Our bread was such as captives' tears Have moisten'd many a thousand years, 135 Since man first pent his fellow men Like brutes within an iron den ; But what were these to us or him ? These wasted not his heart or limb ; My brother's soul was of...
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The Complete Poetical Works of Lord Byron

George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1905 - 1110 pages
...from the mountain goat Was changed for water from the moat, Our bread was such as captives' tears Have But what were these to us or him ? These wasted not his heart or limb; My brother's soul was of that...
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Little Masterpieces of English Poetry: Idyls and stories in verse

Henry Van Dyke, Hardin Craig - American poetry - 1905 - 338 pages
...from the mountain goat Was changed for water from the moat, Our bread was such as captives' tears Have moisten'd many a thousand years, Since man first pent his fellow men Like brutes within an iron den; But what were these to us or him? These wasted not his heart or limb; My brother's soul was of that...
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The Complete Poetical Works of Lord Byron

George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1905 - 1098 pages
...from the mountain goat Was changed for water from the moat, Our bread was such as captives' tears Have 10 And the waves bound beneath me as a steed That knows his rider. Welcome to their roar 1 Swift be But what were these to us or him ? These wasted not his heart or limb; My brother's soul was of t hut...
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The Complete Poetical Works of Lord Byron

George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1905 - 1088 pages
...from the mountain goat Was changed for water from the moat, Our bread was such as captives' tears Have g my bones the creeping flesh did quake ; And as my damp But what were these to us or him ? These wasted not his heart or limb; My brother's soul was of that...
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