Ernest Maltravers — Volume 03 by Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton
page 4 of 44 (09%)
page 4 of 44 (09%)
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They heard thee, Teresa, the Teuton, the Gaul, Who have raised the rude thrones of the North on our fall; They heard thee, and bow'd to the might of thy song; Like love went thy steps o'er the hearts of the strong; As the moon to the air, as the soul to the clay, To the void of this earth was the breath of thy lay. RECITATIVE. Honour for aye to her The bright interpreter Of Art's great mysteries to the enchanted throng; While tyrants heard thy strains, Sad Rome forgot her chains; The world the sword had lost was conquer'd back by song! "Thou repentest, my Teresa, that thou hast renounced thy dazzling career for a dull home, and a husband old enough to be thy father," said the husband to the wife, with a smile that spoke confidence in the answer. "Ah, no! even this homage would have no music to me if thou didst not hear it." She was a celebrated personage in Italy--the Signora Cesarini, now Madame de Montaigne. Her earlier youth had been spent upon the stage, and her promise of vocal excellence had been most brilliant. But after a brief though splendid career, she married a French gentleman of good birth and fortune, retired from the stage, and spent her life |
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