XIII. She gazed in wonder, "Can he calmly sleep, And me and mine he spared from worse than woe: He raised his head-and dazzled with the light, "If so, kind lady! thine the only eye XIV. "Corsair thy doom is named-but I have power Thee would I spare-nay more-would save thee now, The sentence that remits thee scarce a day. *In Sir Thomas More, for instance, on the scaffold, and Ann Boleyn, in the Tower, when, grasping her neck, she remarked, that it was too slender to trouble the headsman much." During one part of the French Revolution, it became a fashion to leave some "mot" as a legacy; and the quantity of facetious last words spoken during that period would form a melancholy jest-book of a considerable ize B. Too harshly told him that he lived again. "What is that form? if not a shape of air. Methinks my jailor's face shows wondrous fair"! The Corsair P. 196. XIII. She gazed in wonder, "Can he calmly sleep, Li lumber breaks omas more, 101 grasping her neck, she remarked, that it was too much.' During one part of the French Revolution, it became a ave some "mot" as a legacy; and the quantity of facetious last words ring that period would form a melancholy jest-book of a considerable |