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Examples

  • Harolde "(Byron's friend Hobhouse, if our memory serves), who adds," If you are in want of consolation for the extinction of patrician power, perhaps you may find it there.

    The Aldine, Vol. 5, No. 1., January, 1872 A Typographic Art Journal Various

  • Prepare thyselfe wyth spede, to Harolde haste awaie.

    The Rowley Poems Thomas Chatterton

  • Kynge Harolde hearde the charge, and wondred at the sounde.

    The Rowley Poems Thomas Chatterton

  • The "Childe Harolde" is the traveller; and as he is a mighty surly fellow, neither loves nor is loved by any one; "through sin's long labyrinth had run, nor made atonement when he did amiss;" as, moreover, he is licentious and sceptical; Lord Byron very naturally, and creditably to himself, sets out in his Preface with disclaiming any connection with this imaginary personage.

    Early Reviews of English Poets John Louis Haney

  • Bie whyche thou, Harolde, shalte be proved mie sonne.

    The Rowley Poems Thomas Chatterton

  • Oh Harolde, heere forstraughteynge [53] wanhope [54] lies.

    The Rowley Poems Thomas Chatterton

  • She sees Kynge Harolde stande, fayre Englands curse and pryde.

    The Rowley Poems Thomas Chatterton

  • Ne moe thatte Harolde shall ywield the erlies swerde.

    The Rowley Poems Thomas Chatterton

  • Quod Harolde; great the foe, so is the glorie grete.

    The Rowley Poems Thomas Chatterton

  • We know it is now the fashion for our young Gentlemen to become Poets, and a very innocent amusement it is, while they confine themselves to putting their travels into verse, like _Childe Harolde_, and Lord Nugent's _Portugal_.

    The Works of Lord Byron: Letters and Journals. Vol. 2 George Gordon Byron Byron 1806

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