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George Crabbe: Poems, Volume 3 (of 3) cover

George Crabbe: Poems, Volume 3 (of 3)

Chapter 147: Tale XVIII.
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About This Book

The volume gathers later narrative and miscellaneous poems, presenting a sequence of Tales of the Hall followed by posthumous pieces and shorter lyrics. An editor’s preface and textual notes outline manuscript sources and variant readings. The poems offer realistic portraits of rural and domestic life, closely observed scenes, and moral reflection on passions such as pride, grief, revenge, and belated refinement, delivered through narrative sketches and reflective commentary. Tone alternates between anecdotal storytelling, satirical observation, and sober moralizing.

Tale XVIII.

l. 11. for stiff sailors read strong Spirits.

l. 146. for For man’s read At man’s.

after l. 194:

Once more he said, “What more must now be past?”
The Captain call’d and made that Once the Last.

after l. 260:

The storm without, within them—but I dwell
Too long in telling what I dread to tell.