Chapter & Verse

Correspondence on not-so-famous lost words

Richard van Frank asks who wrote: “Though children may darken your hours/With their shoutings and their fights,/They also brighten up the house—/ They never turn out the lights.”

 

“telescope of mind” (January-February). Dan Rosenberg was the first to identify this stanza, which begins the prologue to John Howard Payne’s 1818 play Brutus; or The Fall of Tarquin. The author of the prologue may have been one of Payne’s friends, the Reverend George Croly. 

 

“ambassador’s nose” (January-February). Graeme Wood identified this variant of an incident between a footman and child in Gogol’s Dead Souls, chapter two.

Send inquiries and answers to “Chapter and Verse,” Harvard Magazine, 7 Ware Street, Cambridge 02138, or via e-mail to chapterandverse@harvardmag.com.

Click here for the March-April 2009 issue table of contents

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