Wanderings of Childe Harold; a romance of real life, Volum 2 |
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Side 28
... mind ; And that sunk eye , so faded now , Late beam'd with tenderness refin'd . " He resolved to alter the vessel's course from the island of Pantalaria , to which her prow was directed , and endeavour to come up up with this strange ...
... mind ; And that sunk eye , so faded now , Late beam'd with tenderness refin'd . " He resolved to alter the vessel's course from the island of Pantalaria , to which her prow was directed , and endeavour to come up up with this strange ...
Side 34
... mind , and he exhibited but the shadow of what he had been a few days before . No one could have imagined him the character that once was possessed of vigour , firmness , and resolution ; daring and and active , jealous of its fame ...
... mind , and he exhibited but the shadow of what he had been a few days before . No one could have imagined him the character that once was possessed of vigour , firmness , and resolution ; daring and and active , jealous of its fame ...
Side 38
... in order to remove his thoughts from so painful a subject , his friend took the liberty to re- mind him of his child . Harolde was dreadfully agitated , and when he had taken taken a few turns across the room , he de- 38.
... in order to remove his thoughts from so painful a subject , his friend took the liberty to re- mind him of his child . Harolde was dreadfully agitated , and when he had taken taken a few turns across the room , he de- 38.
Side 53
... mind rapidly improved , and with a forlorn hope , he proposed to Freeman to sail up the Barbary coast , visiting the principal cities , and endeavouring to find the lost fair one . First of all , it was de- cided to visit Tunis , than ...
... mind rapidly improved , and with a forlorn hope , he proposed to Freeman to sail up the Barbary coast , visiting the principal cities , and endeavouring to find the lost fair one . First of all , it was de- cided to visit Tunis , than ...
Side 56
... and he often railed at the Pantalarian ladies , when he was actually the slave of one of her great- est coquettes . Love makes strange havock in men's minds before they are aware of it . CHAP . CHAP . II . " Design'd for love and soft 56.
... and he often railed at the Pantalarian ladies , when he was actually the slave of one of her great- est coquettes . Love makes strange havock in men's minds before they are aware of it . CHAP . CHAP . II . " Design'd for love and soft 56.
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Almada Amelia Pedley amongst amusement appearance arms bailiff Belvoir Berenice Bernardo betwixt bishop boat body breast breath breeze bring British Cape Trafalgar Captain Bering carried Carthage Cato and Louis CHAP Childe Harolde commander Count crew Danvers Dasher daughter deck dinner Doctor Pedley dreadful fair fame Fancy favourable fortune French frigate gave give Glenville hand happy harbour Harolde and Freeman Harolde's heart honour hour island Jemima lady Lampedosa Lamska land Lisbon live looked Lord Cockayne lovers Lucca Malta Maltese married ment mima mind Misericorde Mount Etna Mount Strombolo murder Naples never niece night Pantalaria passed passion Pedley's port prize returned rock rolde round ruins sail sailors Scarpio scene sent shew ship shore silence sloop sloop of war smiles soul spect spirits stranger sunk Tagus thee ther thing thought tion Tunis Valetta vessel virtue wife wish wounds yacht
Populære avsnitt
Side 132 - Spans with bright arch the glittering hills below. Why to yon mountain turns the musing eye, "Whose sunbright summit mingles with the sky ? Why do those cliffs of shadowy tint appear More sweet than all the landscape smiling near ?— 'Tis distance lends enchantment to the view, And robes the mountain in its azure hue.
Side 189 - rp 1 is said she once was beautiful; — and still — (For 'tis not years that can have wrought her ill,) — Deep rays of loveliness around her form Beam, as the rainbow that succeeds the storm, Brightens a glorious ruin.
Side 60 - LORD, thy Grandsire had a friend, In days of youthful fame ; Yon distant hills were his domains, Sir Bertram was his name. Where'er the noble Percy fought His friend was at his side ; And many a skirmish with the Scots Their early valour tried.
Side 55 - DESIGNED for peace, and soft delight, For tender love, and pity mild, O seek not thou the craggy height, The howling main, the desert wild ! Stay in the shelter'd valley low, Where calmly blows the fragrant ah-, But shun the mountain's stormy brow, For darken'd winds are raging there.
Side 92 - ... pliant slave In gallant trim, and gay; His course was Pleasure's placid wave, His life a summer's day. And I was caught in Folly's snare, And join'd her giddy train — But found her soon the nurse of Care, And Punishment, and Pain. There surely is some guiding Power Which rightly suffers wrong — Gives Vice to bloom its little hour — But Virtue, late and long.
Side xi - Know not a trace of Nature but the form ; Yet, at thy call, the hardy tar pursued, Pale, but intrepid, sad, but unsubdued, Pierced the deep woods, and, hailing from afar The...
Side 88 - tis Fancy fires the soul. Far beyond the bounds of meaning Fancy flies, a fairy queen ! Fancy, wit and worth disdaining, Gives the prize to Harlequin.
Side 59 - Th' unfeeling for his own. Yet, ah! why should they know their fate, Since sorrow never comes too late, And happiness too swiftly flies ? Thought would destroy their paradise! No more; — where ignorance is bliss, 'Tis folly to be wise.
Side 57 - The midnight wizards, breathing rites abhorr'd ; Trembling, approach'd their incantations fell, And, chill'd with horror, heard the songs of hell.