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William Sidney Walker

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William Sidney Walker (4 December 1795 – 15 October 1846) was an English Shakespearean scholar and poet.

Quotes

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  • Too solemn for day, too sweet for night,
      Come not in darkness, come not in light;
    But come in some twilight interim,
      When the gloom is soft, and the light is dim.
    • "The Lover's Song", st. 6, translating a passage of Lucian. Poetical Remains (1852), p. 33
  • Goshen-spots,
    Aye bright with spiritual sunshine.
    • "To B. H. Kennedy", ll. 5–6. Poetical Remains (1852), p. 41

About

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  • It is a known circumstance that when, at six years old, the tailor came to measure him for his first suit, he was sent into what was called Sidney’s little study, a small quiet room he much favoured; and on the man stating his errand, and his mother repeating it, Sidney said, “I am reading, come and tell me about this line; I cannot tell quite what Milton means here.” To which the man replied, “I know nothing about books, Sir, I am come to take your measure for your new clothes;” and poor Sidney was obliged to put down his Milton, saying, in his always sweet manner when a child “I am so sorry you do not know about such books, they would make you so happy.”
    • Anecdote reported by the author's elderly mother, published in The Poetical Remains of William Sidney Walker, ... with a Memoir, ed. J. Moultrie (1852), pp. iv–v
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