The Greatest Gothic Classics. Оскар Уайльд

The Greatest Gothic Classics - Оскар Уайльд


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the Arabians, that “a bread and salt traitor,” is the most opprobrious invective with which one person can reproach another.—Richardson’s Dissertation on the Languages, etc., of Eastern Nations, p. 219. See also the Story of Ali Baba and The Forty Thieves, in the Arabian Nights, vol. iv, p. 166.

      “More full of peril, and advent’rous spirit,

       Than to o’erwalk a current, roaring loud,

       On the unsteadfast footing of a spear;”

      yet the paradise of Mahomet can be entered by no other avenue. Those, indeed, who have behaved well need not be alarmed; mixed characters will find it difficult; but the wicked soon miss their standing, and plunge headlong into the abyss.—Pococke in Port. Mos., p. 282, etc. Milton apparently copied from this well-known fiction, and not, as Dr. Warton conjectured, from the poet Sadi, his way—

      “Over the dark abyss, whose boiling gulf

       Tamely endured a bridge of wond’rous length,

       From hell continued, reaching the utmost orb

       Of this frail world.”


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