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 94by Louise Swanton-Belloc - 1824Full view - About this book
| George Roy Elliott, Norman Foerster - English poetry - 1923 - 864 pages
...water from the moat, Our bread was such as captives' tears Have moistened 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... | |
| George William McClelland - English literature - 1925 - 1178 pages
...mountain goat Was changed for water from the moat, Our bread was such as captives' tears Have moistened 8 (8 But what were these to us or him? These wasted not his heart or limb; My brother's soul was of that... | |
| American poetry - 1926 - 780 pages
...mountain goat Was changed for water from the moat, Our bread was such as captives' tears 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; My brother's soul was of that... | |
| Arthur Beatty - English poetry - 1928 - 582 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... | |
| Curtis Hidden Page, Stith Thompson - English poetry - 1929 - 1078 pages
...from the mountain goat Was changed for water from the moat, Our bread was such as captives' tears Have ut But what were these to us or him ? These wasted not his heart or limb ; My brother's soul was of that... | |
| Ernest Bernbaum - English literature - 1929 - 408 pages
...water from the moat, Our bread was such as captives' tears Have moistened 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... | |
| George Gordon Byron - Poetry - 1994 - 884 pages
...from the mountain goat Was changed for water from the moat, Our bread was euch 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 t These wasted not bis heart or limb ; My brother's soul was of... | |
| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - Poetry - 1996 - 868 pages
...the mountain goat Was changed for water from the moat, Our bread was such as captive's tears 135 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; 140 My brother's soul was of... | |
| Science - 1817 - 416 pages
...La chaîne vacante, digne monument d'un pareil meurtre , resta suspendue au-dessus de la fosse. » 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 5 My brother's soul was of that... | |
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