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Untitled Article
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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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O lamp of peace ! of inner heaven the most cherished star , first-born of the glorious sun , trembling into excess of light , like a young heart in the fullness of first love , —shine on me , on these weary , aching eyes ; and , through them , shed a holy calm upon a heart that dwells darkly beneath the shadow of its own grief .
Star ! which burneth in crimson light luxurious , with power to guard that lone and purple island of the sea , —that Eden-land beneath , —O look on me ; for I am cold and lone , where love is not , and where sharp eyes pierce through me , and fix their stings upon my aching heart , —look on me !
Purest and brightest one ! thou watchest the moving spheres ; thou lookest into the deepest depths of this wondrous universe . O , be to me a friend ! I have need of thee : look into the depths of my sorrow , and let thy clear beam bring me hope and joy . Inhabitant of highest heaven ! immortality is thine : from the
bright fount of thy parent sun thou drinkest in life for ever . O fill me with thy brightness . So am I immortal , like to thee ; and I lift up mine eyes to thee . My spirit is with thee . Bear me with thee to the fountain of all light—all life ; and there let me live for ever , like thee , a life of immortality and love . K . T .
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S 44 The Magic SmifjT-bor .
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A VAGARY , IMITATED PROM TUB GERMAN OF HOFFMANN . The way in which my very dear and much-respected friend and partner , Mr . Peregrine Twist , obtained his wife , was so extremely
curious , that I have rather hesitated to lay the particulars before the eyes and opinions of a discerning public , though , indeed , it often struck me , and very possibly struck me wrong , that there might be some passages in the affair , both of knowledge entertaining and useful .
It was one dismal Christmas-day evening , that Peregrine Twist sat near a certain door , at the top of the large oaken staircase of an old-fashioned house , situated in one of those narrow and crooked lanes which penetrate the heart of the celebrated London city . He sat on a little stool , in the dark , or , at least , almost in the dark , for the only light was a small glimmering which darted now and then , more or less distinctly , through the
key-hole of the before-mentioned door . Master Peregrine Twist appeared to sit rather uneasy , to which uneasiness he might perhaps be excited by certain savoury , odoriferous , and pung ent scents , which penetrated , in company with the light-beams , throu g h the key-hole and thence to his nose . Now and then , also , Master Peregrine exclaimed , " Gwenilian , is all ready V to which question , from the closed sanctuary , answered a voice like the response of an ancient oracle , " Master Peregrine be quiet ,
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THE MAGIC SNUFF-BOX .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1834, page 844, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2640/page/26/
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