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"Peace be with the dead!" by Lord Byron

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"Peace be with the dead!" by Lord Byron (1788-1824)
Letter to
Mr. Robert Charles Dallas, written on August 12. 1811, a few days after his mother's passing away.

After spending one and half year in Greece Fall 1809 - Spring 1811, returned to England in the Summer of 1811. Soon after his return, his mother died suddenly and unexpectedly. Mr. RC Dallas was a writer friend of Byron.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

To Mr. Robert Charles Dallas.
Newstead Abbey, Notts., August 12. 1811.

Peace be with the dead! Regret cannot wake them. With a sigh to the departed, let us resume the dull business of life, in the certainty that we also shall have our repose. Besides her who gave me being, I have lost more than one who made that being tolerable-The best friend of my friend Hobhouse, Matthews, a man of the first talents, and also not the worst of my narrow circle, has perished miserably in the muddy waves of the Cam, always fatal to genius:-my poor school-fellow, Wingfield, at Coimbra-within a month; and whilst I had heard from all three, but not seen one. Matthews wrote to me the very day before his death; and though I feel for his fate, I am still more anxious for Hobhouse, who, I very much fear, will hardly retain his senses: his letters to me since the event have been most incoherent. But let this pass; we shall all one day pass along with the rest-the world is too full of such things, and our very sorrow is selfish.

"I received a letter from you, which my late occupations prevented me from duly noticing.-I hope your friends and family will long hold together. I shall be glad to hear from you, on business, on common-place, or any thing, or nothing-but death-I am already too familiar with the dead. It is strange that I look on the skulls which stand beside me (I have always had four in my study) without emotion, but I cannot strip the features of those I have known of their fleshy covering, even in idea, without a hideous sensation; but the worms are less ceremonious.-Surely, the Romans did well when they burned the dead.-I shall be happy to hear from you, and am

Yours, etc.
Byron

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