Captain Sword and Captain Pen. A poem. With some remarks on war and military statesmen

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London, 1849 - 101 頁
 

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第 8 頁 - God ! But thy most dreaded instrument In working out a pure intent. Is man — arrayed for mutual slaughter, — . Yea, Carnage is thy daughter...
第 39 頁 - Whilst the ladies loved him the more for his scorn, And thought him the noblest man ever was born, And tears came into the bravest eyes, And hearts swell'd after him double their size, And all that was weak, and all that was strong...
第 40 頁 - Twas all one dance going merrily down, With lights in windows and love in eyes, And a constant feeling of sweet surprise ; But all the next morning 'twas tears and sighs; For the sound of his drums grew less and less, Walking like carelessness off from distress ; And Captain Sword went whistling gay,
第 80 頁 - Next would come a party, rolling a cask of wine or spirits before them, with loud acclamations ; which in an instant was tapped, and in an incredibly short space of time emptied of its contents. Then the ceaseless hum of conversation, the occasional laugh, and wild shout of intoxication, the pitiable cries, or deep moans of the wounded, and the unintermitted roar of the flames, produced altogether such a concert, as no man who listened to it can ever forget.
第 22 頁 - The period will surely arrive when better instructed generations will require all the evidence of history to credit that, in times deeming themselves enlightened, human beings should have been honored with public approval in the very proportion of the misery they caused.
第 38 頁 - Hasty power midst order meet ; And ever and anon the drums and fifes Came like motion's voice, and life's ; Or into the golden grandeurs fell Of deeper instruments, mingling well, Burdens of beauty for winds to bear ; And the cymbals kiss'd in the shining air, And the trumpets their visible voices reared, Each looking forth with its tapestried beard, Bidding the heavens and earth make way For Captain Sword and his battle-array. He, nevertheless, rode...
第 79 頁 - ... ransacked, the furniture wantonly broken, the churches profaned, the images dashed to pieces ; wine and spirit cellars were broken open, and the troops, heated already with angry passions, became absolutely mad by intoxication. All order and discipline were abandoned. The officers had no longer the slightest control over their men, who, on the contrary, controlled the officers ; nor is it by any means certain, that several of the latter did not fall by the hands of the former, when they vainly...
第 25 頁 - It has been said, and may be repeated, that literature is fast becoming all in all to us — our Church, our Senate, our whole social constitution. The true Pope of Christendom is not that feeble old man in Rome, nor is its autocrat the Napoleon, the Nicholas, with...
第 28 頁 - With the attention due to his rank, I instantly begged he would do me the honour to walk in; and, after we had sufficiently bowed to each other, and I had prevailed upon my guest to sit down, I gravely requested him, as I stood before him, to be so good as to state in what way I could have the good fortune to render him any service. The Prince very briefly replied, that he had called upon me, considering...

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