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Daniel Defoe

By Walter Savage Landor

Topics: classic

Few will acknowledge what they owe     To persecuted, brave Defoe.     Achilles, in Homeric song,     May, or he may not, live so long     As Crusoe; few their strength had tried     Without so staunch and safe a guide.     What boy is there who never laid     Under his pillow, half afraid,     That precious volume, lest the morrow     For unlearnt lessons might bring sorrow?     But nobler lessons he has taught     Wide-awake scholars who fear'd naught:     A Rodney and a Nelson may     Without him not have won the day.

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"Few will acknowledge what they owe..."

Exploring the themes of classic, Walter Savage Landor delivers a powerful performance in "Daniel Defoe"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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Author:Walter Savage Landor

"Few will acknowledge what they owe..." by Walter Savage Landor

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Walter Savage Landor

About Walter Savage Landor

Walter Savage Landor (1775–1864) was an English poet and prose writer whose "Imaginary Conversations" and lyric poems are marked by classical restraint and epigrammatic wit. His poem "Rose Aylmer" is one of the most admired short poems in English.

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"Now thou art gone, tho' not gone far,     It seems..."

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