The Literary souvenir; or, Cabinet of poetry and romance, ed. by A.A. WattsAlaric Alexander Watts Hurst, Robinson and Company ... and A. Constable and Company, 1826 - English literature |
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Page xiii
... Watch : a Tale My Own Fireside . By Alaric A. Watts • 1233 50 52 53 75 To a Poet's Infant Child . By M. J. J. , Author of " Phan- tasmagoria ; or Sketches of Life and Literature " 78 Aymer's Tomb . By Mrs. Hemans · 81 David's Lament ...
... Watch : a Tale My Own Fireside . By Alaric A. Watts • 1233 50 52 53 75 To a Poet's Infant Child . By M. J. J. , Author of " Phan- tasmagoria ; or Sketches of Life and Literature " 78 Aymer's Tomb . By Mrs. Hemans · 81 David's Lament ...
Page 52
... yellow hair ; The vesper hymn and thy orisons o'er , Hie thee away to the lonely shore : The moon's soft light is on the sea , Now , Marie , my love , I come to thee ! H. THE DIAMOND WATCH . He holds him with his glittering.
... yellow hair ; The vesper hymn and thy orisons o'er , Hie thee away to the lonely shore : The moon's soft light is on the sea , Now , Marie , my love , I come to thee ! H. THE DIAMOND WATCH . He holds him with his glittering.
Page 53
Alaric Alexander Watts. THE DIAMOND WATCH . He holds him with his glittering eye . Coleridge . Ir was a glorious evening in the summer of 1793 - sky and cloud blending in one uniform flood of splendour . The brightness of the heavens was ...
Alaric Alexander Watts. THE DIAMOND WATCH . He holds him with his glittering eye . Coleridge . Ir was a glorious evening in the summer of 1793 - sky and cloud blending in one uniform flood of splendour . The brightness of the heavens was ...
Page 54
... rest of his , appearance , crowded from under his high - crowned hat in black and grizzly masses . " A good evening to you , Meine Herren , " said the little old man , with a most polite bow , as 54 THE DIAMOND WATCH .
... rest of his , appearance , crowded from under his high - crowned hat in black and grizzly masses . " A good evening to you , Meine Herren , " said the little old man , with a most polite bow , as 54 THE DIAMOND WATCH .
Page 55
... watch richly chased , and studded all over with diamonds . The students were delighted with the splendid jewel , and admired by turns the beauty of the manufacture and the costliness of the materials . The elder youth , how- ever ...
... watch richly chased , and studded all over with diamonds . The students were delighted with the splendid jewel , and admired by turns the beauty of the manufacture and the costliness of the materials . The elder youth , how- ever ...
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Common terms and phrases
ALARIC Allan Cunningham art thou beauty blood blue BOLTON ABBEY bosom bower breast breath bright bright eyes brow charmed cheek child cried dance dark deep dream earth eyes fair fair Lady farewell fear feel flowers forest gaze gentle grace hand hath heard heart heaven honour hopes hour JAMES HOGG lady Beatrice Lady Jane Lady L laugh Lennox light lips Literary Souvenir looked lord Lord Somerset lover maid Malhamdale marriage merlin mind minstrel morning never night noble o'er pale passed Pierce pray pride Rosamunda round scarcely scene seemed Sibyl sigh sing Sir Lubin Sir Luke sleep smile song soul spirit stood strange stranger sweet tears tell TEMPLE OF VESTA thee Theophan thine thing thou thought Thyrza turned Twas voice watch WATTS wave whilst whispered wild wind word yeoman young youth
Popular passages
Page 75 - Twixt book and lute the hours divide, And marvel how I e'er could stray From thee — my own fireside ! My own fireside ! Those simple words Can bid the sweetest dreams arise, Awaken feeling's tenderest chords, And fill with tears of joy my eyes. What is there my wild heart can prize That doth not in thy sphere abide, Haunt of my home-bred sympathies, My own — my own fireside...
Page 408 - THE EXCHANGE. WE pledged our hearts, my love and I, — I in my arms the maiden clasping ; I could not tell the reason why, But, oh ! I trembled like an aspen. Her father's love she bade me gain ; I went, and shook like any reed ! I strove to act the man — in vain ! We had exchanged our hearts indeed.
Page 75 - LET others seek for empty joys, At ball, or concert, rout, or play ; Whilst, far from fashion's idle noise, Her gilded domes, and trappings gay, I while the wintry eve away, — 'Twixt book and lute the hours divide ; And marvel how I e'er could stray From thee — my own Fireside! My own Fireside ! Those simple words Can bid the sweetest dreams arise ; Awaken feeling's tenderest chords, And fill with tears of joy...
Page 76 - A babe whose beauty's half divine, In sleep his mother's eyes doth hide ; Where may love seek a fitter shrine Than thou — my own Fireside ? What care I for the sullen roar...
Page 38 - And beautiful, midst that wild scene, Gleam'd up the boy's dead face, Like slumber's, trustingly serene, In melancholy grace. Deep in her bosom lay his head, With half-shut violet eye — He had known little of her dread, Nought of her agony ! Oh ! human love, whose yearning heart Through all things vainly true, So stamps upon thy mortal part Its passionate adieu — Surely thou hast another lot, There is some home for thee, Where thou shalt rest, rememb'ring not The moaning of the sea ! THE TRUMPET.
Page 77 - Hath never made its hated lair By thee — my own Fireside ! Thy precincts are a charmed ring, Where no harsh feeling dares intrude ; Where life's vexations lose their sting ; Where even grief is half subdued : And Peace, the halcyon, loves to brood. Then, let the pampered fool deride...
Page 38 - Oh, human love ! whose yearning heart Through all things vainly true, So stamps upon thy mortal part, Its passionate adieu ! Surely thou hast another lot, There is some home for thee, Where thou shall rest, remembering not The moaning of the sea ! * This circumstance is related of Mrs.
Page 36 - Had vailed her topsails to the sand, And bowed her noble mast. The queenly ship! — brave hearts had striven, And true ones died with her — We saw her mighty cable riven, Like floating gossamer. We saw her proud flag struck that morn, A star once o'er the seas— Her...
Page 36 - We saw her proud flag struck that morn — A star once o'er the seas, — Her anchor gone, her deck uptorn, And sadder things than these...
Page 260 - We are a ruined nation,— a nation on the very verge of bankruptcy, and its attendants, anarchy and confusion; and, instead of things growing better, to every reflecting person it is as plain as that two and two make four, that they will yet be many degrees worse.