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Untitled Article
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Transcript
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Was born a third of * dmvalry ^ ( And is to come again , they say . Blowing its trumpets inta day , With sudden earthquake from the ground , And in the midst , great Arthur crown'd ) I used to think of thee and thine
As one of an old faded line , Living in his hills apart , Whose pride I knew , but not his heart : — But now that I have seen thy face , Thy fields , and ever youthful race , And women ' s lips of rosiest word , So rich they open ; and have heard The harp still leaping in thy halls ,
Quenchless as the waterfalls , I know thee full of pulse as strong As the sea ' s more ancient song , And of a sympathy as wide ; And all this truth , and more beside , I should have known , had I but seen , O Flint , thy little shore ; and been Where Truth and Dream walk , hand-in-hand Bodryddan ' s Living Fairy-land .
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EXHIBITED IN SUNDRY LETTERS AN £ MEMOIRS COLLECTED BY THB LATE J . J . PIDCOCK RAIKES , ESQ . ; AND NOW FIRST PUBLISHED BY HIS NEPHEW , SIR RODNEY RAIKES , WITH SEVERAL MATERIAL ADDITIONS .
No . III .
THE PAKROCO SPINEtXA TO MR RAIKES . * Probably your most illustrious Lordship inay have heard , during Her residence in Tuscany , of our © ante Alighieri ,
author of sundry works both in poetry and prose , both in our Italian tongue and in the latin ; but most notedly and especially of a certain long and elaborate poem , entitled
? To those familiar with the manners and customs of Italy we need not point out the force and finish of the picture given in the text . By such of our reader * the style of Spinella ' s letters , the peculiarities of his historical knowledge , and hit orthography , even , will he recognised as typical of a large' class in that country where a curious and touching childishness has survived the hard lessons of political trouble . In Spinella it does not always take its most engaging form '; but ( it is of the same genus with the simplicity anc ( good , faith of " lesser JLudovico , " and honest Giovanni Boccaccio , in whom it is as naked and charming at in one of Cor * reggio ' s unsophisticated Bambini , ^[ J&D 9 M . ft . ]
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246 High and&oivjUfein Italy .
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HIGH AND LOW LIFE IN ITALY ,
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Oct. 1, 1837, page 246, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1836/page/22/
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