Active Blogs | Popular Blogs | Recent Blogs Let me add, that Lord Tliurlow's sonnet To louboutinsa bird that haunted the waters of Lahen in the winter was a favourite with Charles Lamb.¡ª ED. Paris ; and there he spent about a thousand a- year.At the time when Moore was struggling with his grief for the loss of his children, he said to me, "What a wonderful man that Shakespeare is! how perfectly I now feel the truth of his words,¡ª "And if I laugh at any mortal thing, chaussures louboutin'Tis that I may not weep"! I happened to repeat to Mrs. N. what Moore had said; upon which she observed, " Why, the passage is not Shakespeare's, but Byron's." And sure enough we found it in Don Juan. Another lady, who was present, having declared that she did not understand it, I said, " I will give you an illustration of it. A friend of mine was chiding his daughter. She laugh¬ed. ' Now,' continued the father, ' you make mat(Moore had forgotten that he had quoted the passage as Byron's in his Life of Byron),¡ªRichardson had said the same thingchaussures christian louboutin long ago:¡ª" Indeed, it is to this deep concern that my levity is owing: for I struggle and struggle, and try to buffet down my cruel reflections as they rise; and when I cannot, I am forced, as I have often said, to try to make myself laugh, that I may not cry; for one or other I must do: and is it not philosophy carried to the highest pitch, for a man tolouboutin soldes conquer such tumults of soul as I am sometimes agitated by, and, in the very height of the storm, to be able to quaver out an horse-laugh ?" Clarissa Harlowe, Letter 84, vol. vii. 319.¡ªED.worse by laughing.' She then burst into tears, exclaiming, ' If I do not laugh, I must cry.' "Moore has now taken to an amusement which is very well suited to thelouboutin pas cher fifth act of life;¡ªhe plays cribbage every night with Mrs. Moore, In the Memoir of Cary by his son, Coleridge is said to have first become acquainted with Cary's Dante when he met the translator at Little Hamp¬ton. But that is a mistake. Moore mentioned the work to me with great admiration; I mentioned it to Wordsworth ; and he to Coleridge, who had never heard of it till then, and who forthwith read it.
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