Thomas Kibble Hervey Quotations
Thomas Kibble Hervey (February 4, 1799 – February 27, 1859) was a British poet and critic.
Sourced
- Wake, soldier, wake, thy war-horse waits
To bear thee to the battle back;
Thou slumberest at a foeman’s gates,—
Thy dog would break thy bivouac;
Thy plume is trailing in the dust
And thy red falchion gathering rust.
- The dead Trumpeter.
- Gayly we glide in the gaze of the world
With streamers afloat and with canvas unfurled,
All gladness and glory to wandering eyes,
Yet chartered by sorrow and freighted with sighs.
- The convict Ship.
The Devil's Progress (1849)
- The tomb of him who would have made The world too glad and free.
- He stood beside a cottage lone And listened to a lute, One summer’s eve, when the breeze was gone, And the nightingale was mute.
- A love that took an early root, And had an early doom.
- Like ships, that sailed for sunny isles, But never came to shore.
- A Hebrew knelt in the dying light, His eye was dim and cold, The hairs on his brow were silver-white, And his blood was thin and old.
External links
Wikipedia has an article about: Thomas Kibble Hervey- Thomas Kibble Hervey (Frederic Boase, Modern English Biography (1892-1921) 1:1451).
- Biography of T.K. Hervey in The Real Romantics: 1799-1830
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