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a sudden rush, which words could never speak

 
a sudden rush, a something of sound behind me     ₁
as though a something of the past     ₂
 
a something of some few dimensions, a span-long     ₃
literature or something of that kind     ₄
 
a something of familiar sound     ₅
a something of which running water     ₆
 
as fluidity resides in water; a something of nothing     ₇
a something of that restlessness, which     ₈
 
curative agency is resolvable into a something of change     ₉
a something of life, a speck only; this somewhat about     ₁₀
 
still a something of the day     ₁₁
a something of light heart     ₁₂
 
A something of the heaven’s own light,
      Which words could never speak.     ₁₃
 
 

sources (their respective details at the more’s)

  1. conclusion of Gordon Young his four-part story “Sourcery and Everhard,” in Adventure (First August, 1921)
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  2. J. St. Clement [Eliza Cook?], “My Walk to ‘The Office’” (No. vi. and last), in Eliza Cook’s Journal No. 100 (Saturday, March 29, 1851)
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  3. ex The Royall Passing-Bell : Or Davids Summons to the Grave. A Sermon preached (lately) in the Parish-Church of Orchard-Portman in Sommerset. At the Funerall of the most hopefull, and truly-noble, Sr. Hugh Portman, Baronet; the great losse and sorrow both of his name and countrie.
    By Humphrey Sydenham... (London, 1630)
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  4. Anthony Hope, The Dolly Dialogues (Chicago; ca 1894?; 1890)
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  5. Jane Austen, Persuasion (1818)
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  6. chapter 4, on “Roads,” in The rural economy of the Midland counties; including the management of livestock, in Leicestershire and its environs: together with minutes on agriculture and planting in the district of the Midland Station. By Mr. Marshall. v. 1 (of 2) (London, 1796)
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  7. from Chapter 55 “The Spiritual Sense of the World,” in The Yoga-vásishtha-mahárámáyana of Válmiki, translated from the original Sanskrit by Vihári-lála Mitra; Containing The Nirvána-Prakarana, Uttarádha (Calcutta, 1899)
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  8. “Passages from the Life of Mary Stuart,” The American Monthly Magazine (August 1, 1834)
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  9. David Uwins, A Treatise on those Diseases which Are Either Directly or Indirectly Connected with Indigestion : Comprising a Commentary on the Principal Ailments of Children (London, 1827)
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  10. a ( fortuitous ? ) OCR misread across columns two and three (near top) of page, at “Inaugural Address of the President, Thomas R. Huxley, LL.D., F.R.S., etc., before the British Association for the Advancement of Science,” in Scientific American> (October 8, 1870)
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  11. ex Canto IV, 102-103 of “Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage” in The Works of the Right Hon. Lord Byron, vol. 2 (of 2); (London, 1815)
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  12. ex “The Foundling of Liverpool,” by the author [likely Felix M’Donogh (1768?-1836)] of the Hermit in London, in The Ladies’ Museum “New and improved series” (London; January 1831)
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  13. ex stanza 2 (of 15) in the poem “The Ruin” by “Linus,” in The American Monthly Magazine (August 1, 1834)
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