Memoirs of the Life of Sir Walter Scott, Bart, 第 3 巻R. Cadell, 1839 |
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... late in the evening , having let hours after hours slip away among the soft and melancholy wildernesses where Yarrow creeps from her fountains . The lines , " Oft in my mind such thoughts awake , By lone Saint Mary's silent like , " & c ...
... late in the evening , having let hours after hours slip away among the soft and melancholy wildernesses where Yarrow creeps from her fountains . The lines , " Oft in my mind such thoughts awake , By lone Saint Mary's silent like , " & c ...
15 ページ
... late Lord Abercorn on his way with his family to Ireland . His Lord- ship did not arrive for two or three days after we reached Dumfries , and we employed the interval in visiting Sweetheart Abbey , Caerlaverock Castle , and some other ...
... late Lord Abercorn on his way with his family to Ireland . His Lord- ship did not arrive for two or three days after we reached Dumfries , and we employed the interval in visiting Sweetheart Abbey , Caerlaverock Castle , and some other ...
31 ページ
... late as 1637 , so I must look out for earlier editions to collate . That of Caxton is , I believe , introuvable . Will you give me your opinion on this project ? I have written to Mr Frere about the Spanish books , but I do not very ...
... late as 1637 , so I must look out for earlier editions to collate . That of Caxton is , I believe , introuvable . Will you give me your opinion on this project ? I have written to Mr Frere about the Spanish books , but I do not very ...
33 ページ
... late strain of politics which they have adopted , as it seems , even on their own showing , to be cruelly imprudent . Who ever thought he did a service to a person engaged in an arduous conflict , by proving VOL . III . C to him , or ...
... late strain of politics which they have adopted , as it seems , even on their own showing , to be cruelly imprudent . Who ever thought he did a service to a person engaged in an arduous conflict , by proving VOL . III . C to him , or ...
34 ページ
... late . " As for my good friend Dundee , I cannot admit his culpability in the extent you allege ; and it is scandalous of the Sunday bard to join in your con- demnation , and yet come of a noble Græme ! ' I admit he was tant soit peu ...
... late . " As for my good friend Dundee , I cannot admit his culpability in the extent you allege ; and it is scandalous of the Sunday bard to join in your con- demnation , and yet come of a noble Græme ! ' I admit he was tant soit peu ...
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66 Edinburgh 66 My Dear Abbotsford admirable alluded amusement appeared Ashestiel ballad Barnard Castle believe bookseller brother Canto Castle character connexion Constable copy criticism Dear Southey delighted doubt Dryden Edin Edinburgh Annual Edinburgh Review edition English expressed father favour favourite feelings genius George Ellis Gifford give hand Henry Highland honour hope Inchkenneth interest James James Ballantyne Jeffrey Joanna Baillie John Ballantyne kind labours Lady Lake least less letter literary literature London Lord Byron Lord Melville Lordship Marmion mentioned mind Minstrel Miss Baillie Morritt Murray never occasion opinion party perhaps person pleasure poem poet poetical poetry political published reader Robert Southey Rokeby Rokeby Park romance scene Scotch Scotland seems Siddons soon spirit Staffa success sure talent thing thought tion verses volume WALTER SCOTT WAVERLEY NOVELS Whig whole wish write young
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61 ページ - For talents mourn, untimely lost, When best employed and wanted most; Mourn genius high, and lore profound, And wit that loved to play, not wound ; And all the reasoning powers divine, To penetrate, resolve, combine ; And feelings keen, and fancy's glow, They sleep with him who sleeps below...
250 ページ - He either fears his fate too much, Or his deserts are small, Who dares not put it to the touch, To gain or lose it all.
361 ページ - Dutch settlement, was not, as might have been expected, in the best order; the apartment had not been regularly ventilated, and, either from this circumstance, or already affected by the fatal sickness peculiar to Batavia, Leyden, when he left the place, had a fit of shivering, and declared the atmosphere was enough to give any mortal a fever. The presage was too just; he took his bed, and died in three days, on the eve of the battle which gave Java to the British empire.
34 ページ - I humbly think that we may be excused from intrusting to them those places in the State where the influence of such a clergy, who act under the direction of a passive tool of our worst foe, is likely to be attended with the most fatal consequences. If a gentleman chooses to walk about with a couple of pounds of gunpowder in his pocket, if I give him the shelter of my roof, I may at least be permitted to exclude him from the seat next to the fire.
159 ページ - On a circle of stones but barely nine ; They heated it red and fiery hot, Till the burnished brass did glimmer and shine. They rolled him up in a sheet of lead — A sheet of lead for a funeral pall ; They plunged him in the cauldron red, And melted him, lead, and bones, and all.
214 ページ - ... amusement. I have heard Scott chuckle with particular glee over the recollection of an excursion to the vale of the Ettrick, near which river the party were pursued by a bull. " Come, King John," said he, " we must even take the water," and accordingly he and * Miscellaneous Prose Works, vol.
395 ページ - The poem, my Lord, was not written upon contract for a sum of money — though it is too true that it was sold and published in a very unfinished state (which I have since regretted), to enable me to extricate myself from some engagements which fell suddenly upon me, by the unexpected misfortunes of a very near relation. So that, to quote statute and precedent, I really come under the case cited by Juvenal, though not quite in the extremity of the classic author — Esurit, intactam Paridi nisi vendit...
50 ページ - I should scarcely venture to put this into your hands. As it is, I do it with no little solicitude, and earnestly hope that it will make no difference in the friendship which has hitherto subsisted between us. I have spoken of your poem exactly as I think, and though I cannot reasonably suppose that you will be pleased with every thing I have said, it would mortify me very severely to believe I had given you pain. If you have any amity left for me, you will not delay very long to tell me so. In the...
76 ページ - ... best Greek and Roman authorities, than to exhibit distinguished specimens of success in either department; just as they are said to possess the best possible rules for building ships of war, although not equally remarkable for their power of fighting them. When criticism becomes a pursuit separate from poetry, those who follow it are apt to forget, that the legitimate ends of the art for which they lay down rules, are instruction or delight, and that these points being attained, by what road...
52 ページ - ... that we never entertained much partiality for this sort of composition, and ventured on a former occasion to express our regret, that an author endowed with such talents should consume them in imitations of obsolete extravagance, and in the representation of manners and sentiments in which none of his readers can be supposed to take much interest, except the few who can judge of their exactness. To write a modern romance of chivalry, seems to be much such a fantasy as to build a modern abbey,...