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" They lay like carcasses ; and hope was none, Save in the breeze that came not : savagely They glared upon each other — all was done, Water, and wine, and food, — and you might see The longings of the cannibal arise (Although they spoke not) in their... "
The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Page 8
1833
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The Collected Works of William Hazlitt: Table talk and Conversations of ...

William Hazlitt - English essays - 1903 - 536 pages
...Partie I. Livre iii. (ed. Gamier, pp. Si-z). 425. And looked round on them with their tooljish eyes. 'The longings of the cannibal arise (Although they spoke not) in their wolfish eyes.' Do* yuan, Canto 11. 72. 426. Tki last. Tat Fair Maid of Perth published as Chronicles tftke Canongeie...
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The Collected Works of William Hazlitt: Table talk and Conversations of ...

William Hazlitt - English essays - 1903 - 538 pages
...Confessions, Partie I. Lrvre iii. (ed. pp. 81-2). 425. An. I lotted nund on item viith their -wolfish eyes. 'The longings of the cannibal arise (Although they spoke not) in their wolfish eves.' Canto 11. 72. 426. Ttt Ust. Tit Fair Maid of Perth published as Chronicles tftht (2nd Series)...
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The Complete Poetical Works of Lord Byron

George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1905 - 1110 pages
...savagely They glared iipon each other — all was done, Water, and wine, and food, — and you might see The longings of the cannibal arise (Although they spoke not) in their wolfish eyes. LXXIII At length one whisper'd his companion, who Whisper'd another, and thus it went round, And then...
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The Little Room

Guy Noel Pocock - English essays - 1926 - 290 pages
...savagely They glared upon each other—all was done, Water, and wine, and food,—and you might see The longings of the cannibal arise (Although they spoke not) in their wolfish eyes. At length one whisper'd his companion, who Whisper'd another, and thus it went round, And then into...
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Abandoned Women and Poetic Tradition

Lawrence Lipking - Literary Criticism - 1988 - 329 pages
...awaits the letter. Fifty stanzas later, the ship has wrecked and the survivors are dying of hunger: "The longings of the cannibal arise / (Although they spoke not) in their wolfish eyes." They resolve to draw lots, But of materials that much shock the Muse— Having no paper, for the want...
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Romantic Poetry: Recent Revisionary Criticism

Karl Kroeber, Gene W. Ruoff - Poetry - 1993 - 520 pages
..."lay like carcasses; and hope was none, / . . . They glared upon each other . . . And you might see / The longings of the cannibal arise / (Although they spoke not) in their wolfish eyes" (n. lxxii). Like original sin, the longings arise and intensify from within; motionless, the men are...
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The Collected Poems of Lord Byron

George Gordon Byron - Poetry - 1994 - 884 pages
...savagely They glared upon each other — all was done, Water, and wine, and food,— and you might see The longings of the cannibal arise (Although they spoke not) in their wolfish eyes. Lxxm. At length one whisper'd his companion, who Whisper'd another, and thus it went round, And then...
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Lord Byron: The Critical Heritage

Andrew Rutherford - Literary Criticism - 1995 - 536 pages
...savagely They glared upon each other — all was done, Water, and wine, and food, — and you might see The longings of the cannibal arise, (Although they spoke not) in their wolfish eyes. At length one whispered his companion, who Whispered another, and thus it went round And then into...
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The Cambridge Companion to Edgar Allan Poe

Kevin J. Hayes - Biography & Autobiography - 2002 - 290 pages
...open boat: They glared upon each other - all was done, Water, and wine, and food, - and you might see The longings of the cannibal arise (Although they spoke not) in their wolfish eyes.'1 But if this inner cannibal did not appear in their eyes, if the survivors exhibited nothing...
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Taste: A Literary History

Denise Gigante - Literary Criticism - 2008 - 264 pages
...seventh day, a more symbolically loaded occasion. "The seventh day and no wind," the narrator reports. "The longings of the cannibal arise / (Although they spoke not) in their wolfish eyes" (DJ 2.72). Adopting Savigny and Corréard's method of relating the events following the shipwreck as...
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