Thomas Wingfold, Curate by George MacDonald
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page 19 of 598 (03%)
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wine-party, who, alone with his ink-pot, was for ever enacting the
part of the unheeded poet, complaining of the hard hearts and tuneless ears of his generation. I went into his room once, and found him with the tears running down his face, a pot of stout half empty on the table, and his den all but opaque with tobacco-smoke, reciting, with sobs--I had repeated the lines so often before they ceased to amuse me, that I can never forget them-- 'Heard'st thou a quiver and clang? In thy sleep did it make thee start? 'Twas a chord in twain that sprang-- But the lyre-shell was my heart.' He took a pull at the stout, laid his head on the table, and sobbed like a locomotive." "But it's not very bad--not bad at all, so far as I see," said Helen, who had a woman's weakness for the side attacked, in addition to a human partiality for fair play. "No, not bad at all--for absolute nonsense," said Bascombe. "He had been reading Heine," said Wingfold. "And burlesquing him," returned Bascombe. "Fancy hearing one of the fellow's heart-strings crack, and taking it for a string of his fiddle in the press! By the way, what are the heart-strings? Have they any anatomical synonym? But I have no doubt it was good poetry." |
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