Often, as in verse after verse of The weeper, it has an unearthly delicacy and witchery which only Blake, in a few snatches, has ever equalled; while at other times the poet seems to invent, in the most casual and unthinking fashion, new metrical effects and new jewelries of diction which the greatest lyric poets since-Coleridge, Shelley, Lord Tennyson, Mr. Swinburne-have rather deliberately imitated than spontaneously recovered.
"A History of English Literature Elizabethan Literature"
George Saintsbury
The echoes of them rang in his ears as he stood endeavouring to hide his disfigured face by looking over the parapet of the bridge down upon the stream running away towards the ocean, into which his hot tears slowly fell, unheeded by the weeper.
"Sylvia's Lovers -- Complete"
Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell
They revoked the sentence of death, calling the child Yahuar-huaccac, which means "weeper of blood," in allusion to what had taken place.
"History of the Incas"
Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa