| Robert Bridges - 1924 - 296 頁
...returns too soon, Yet we '11 go no more a-roving By the light of the moon. Byron. 169 Napoleon's Farewell FAREWELL to the Land where the gloom of my Glory Arose and o'ershadow'd the earth with her name — She abandons me now — but the page of her story, The brightest... | |
| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1996 - 868 頁
...the sword, Hath melted like snow in the glance of the Lord! 1 Napoleon 's Farewell (From the French) Farewell to the Land, where the gloom of my Glory Arose and o'ershadow'd the earth with her name She abandons me now - but the page of her story, The brightest... | |
| Robert F. Gleckner, Robert Gleckner, Bernard G. Beatty - 1997 - 426 頁
...vision to the point of private desire only, and Byron would have Napoleon realize this: 'I [Napoleon] have warred with a World which vanquished me only/ When the meteor of conquest allured me too far' ('Napoleon's Farewell', 11.5-6). He is depicted similarly in Childe Harold III. To achieve his increasingly... | |
| Jane Austen - 2006 - 56 頁
...'Napoleon's Fare-well [from the French]' in his Poems published by Murray in April 1816. It opens with 'FAREWELL to the Land "where the gloom of my Glory/ Arose and o'ershadow'd the earth "with her name'. Expressing the heroics of "war, it absolves a thoroughly Romantic... | |
| M. B. Synge - 2013 - 249 頁
...summit of the Pyrenees — a conqueror. Napoleon at last had found a rival. 42. FALL OF THE BMPIEB. " Farewell to the land where the gloom of my glory Arose...The brightest or blackest, Is filled with my fame." — BYBON (Napoleon's Farewell). NAPOLEON had returned to Paris at Christmas- time in 1812. The following... | |
| Jocelyn Harris - 2007 - 288 頁
...only lapsed upon Napoleon's death, in 1821. In Byron's poem, Napoleon complains bitterly that France "abandons me now — but the page of her story / The brightest or blackest, is filled with my fame." Although he made France "the gem and the wonder of earth," its "weakness" decrees that he leaves her... | |
| 196 頁
...stone ; The Mede is at his gate ! The Persian on his throne ! ' NAPOLEON'S FAREWELL. [FROM THE FRENCH.] Farewell to the Land where the gloom of my Glory Arose and o'ershadow'd the earth with her name- — She abandons me now — but the page of her story, The brightest... | |
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