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Each mother | held a- | loft | her child
To bless the | bow of | God.1791991

Me- thinks,

thy | jubilee to | keep,| The | first made | anthem | rang|

On earthde- | livered from the deep;11 And the first poet | sang.1|79|

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Un-raptured | greet thy | beam:
Theme of pri- | meval | prophecy, |

Bestill the poet's | theme! |11|77|

The earth to | thee her | incense | yields,|
The | lark thy | welcome | sings,||

Where glittering in the | freshen'd | field's |
The snowy mushroom | springs.

How glorious is thy | girdle | cast

O'er mountain, | tower, and | town, |
Or mirror'd in the | Ocean | vast,|

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A thousand | fathoms | down! 191991
|

As fresh in | yon ho- | rizon | dark, |

As young thy | beauties | seem, |

As when the eagle | from the | ark 1|
First sported in thy | beam. | 99191

For, faithful to its | sacred | page, |

Heaven | still re- | builds thy | span, |17|
Nor | lets the type grow | pale with | age |

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That first | spoke | peace to man. |

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OTHELLO'S ADDRESS TO THE SENATE.

Shakspeare.

grave, | and | reverend | seigniors, and ap- | proved | good| mas- |

Most potent,

My very noble,

ters; |

That I have taken a- | way this | old man's |

daughter,

It is most true; 11 true, I have | married

her; |

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And little bless'd with the | set | phrase of | peace;

For since these | arms of mine | had | seven years | pith, |

Till now, some | nine | moons | wasted, they have used

Their dearest | action in the | tented | field; | And little of this | great | world | can | I

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speak |

More than per- tains to | feats of | broil, | and |

battle;

And, therefore, little shall I grace my

cause,

In speaking for my- | self: || yet by

your | patience, |

I will around un- | varnish'd | tale de- | liver,

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Of my whole | course of | love: what | drugs, |

what charms, |

What | conju- | ration, and what | mighty | magic, | (For such pro- |ceeding | I am | charg'd with- | al,) | I won his daughter | with. |11|11|

Her father | lov'd me; | | oft in- | vited me; | MI

Still question'd me the

From year to | year;

fortunes,

That I have past. |

story of my life, |

the | battles, | sieges, |

1771

I run it thro' | even from my | boyish | days, |

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Of being taken, by the | inṣolent | foe, |

And sold to slavery; of my re- | demption | thence;

Of | battles | bravely, | hardly | fought; ||of| victories,

For which the conqueror | mourn'd so many | fell! 1971

Sometimes I told the story of a siege, | Where-in, I had to combat | plagues and | famine,

Soldiers un-paid; || fearful to | fight, yet | bold |

In dangerous | mutiny. 1991

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She'd come a- | gain, | and with a | greedy | ear | Devour up my dis- course:

I ob- serving,

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which |

Took once a pliant | hour; || and | found | good means |

To draw from her a prayer of | earnest | heart, | That I would | all my | pilgrimage | di- | late, |

Where- of by | parcels she had
I

heard,

something |

But not dis- | tinctively. ||1|I | did con- |

sent,

And often did be- | guile her of her |

tears

When I did | speak of | some dis- | tressful | stroke | That my youth | suffer'd.

being done,

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My story

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She gave me, for my | pains, a world of | sighs! ||

She swore, "In | faith 'twas | strange, │'twas | passing | strange; | 11

'Twas | pitiful, 'twas wonderous | pitiful." | 1| She wish'd she | had not | heard it;

wish'd |

yet she |

That | heaven had | made | her | such a | man; ||

she thank'd me

|

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And bade me, if I had a | friend that | lov'd her,

I should but teach him | how to tell my story, | And that would | woo her. 1111110n| | this hint I spake. ||19|

She | lov'd | me,

pass'd; | 11

for the dangers | I had |

9|

I have used. |

And | I | lov'd | her | that she did | pity them. This, only, is the witchcraft

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Oh! that the

CANTO IX. CLXXXVI.

Desert were my | dwelling place, |

With one fair | Spirit | for my minister, | 17 | That I might | all for- | get the | human | race, i And hating no one, | love | but | only | her! 77771

Ye | Elements! in | whose en- | nobling | stir |
I feel myself ex- alted; || Can ye not |
Accord me | such a | being? |19|77| Do I |

err

In deeming such in- | habit | many a | spot? |

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