Indexed in the public record
“That all-softening, overpowering knell, The tocsin of the soul,--the dinner bell.”
Provenance
- Source:
- Don Juan. Canto v. Stanza 49.
- Type:
- Book
- Confidence:
- 0.85
- Indexed:
- 2026-07-04
- Hash:
- a4613133f45db2ad7069610d1887c8aae5e9481003781628af12fb4765951cf6
public domain
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 9th ed. (Little, Brown, 1905), public domain
Related in the record
“Those evening bells! those evening bells! How many a tale their music tells Of youth and home, and…”
Thomas Moore
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 9th ed. (Little, Brown, 1905), public domain
“Disparting towers Trembling all precipitate down dash'd, Rattling around, loud thundering to the moon.”
John Dyer
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 9th ed. (Little, Brown, 1905), public domain
“Sing again, with your dear voice revealing A tone Of some world far from ours, Where music and…”
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 9th ed. (Little, Brown, 1905), public domain
“Clothing the palpable and familiar With golden exhalations of the dawn.”
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 9th ed. (Little, Brown, 1905), public domain
“Calm on the listening ear of night Come Heaven's melodious strains, Where wild Judea stretches far Her silver-mantled…”
Edmund H. Sears
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 9th ed. (Little, Brown, 1905), public domain
“Speed the soft intercourse from soul to soul, And waft a sigh from Indus to the Pole.”
Alexander Pope
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 9th ed. (Little, Brown, 1905), public domain
Said something yourself? Put it on the record — $5.
A timestamped public registration for your own line — before someone else claims it.
This is an indexed reference citation, not a legal registry entry and not a claim of ownership.