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Be Still, My Beating HeartBe Still, My Beating Heart : PhrasesMeaning: Expression of excitement when seeing the object of one's romantic affections. Originally used with the swooning earnestness of woman's poetry of the Romantic period. Now more often used ironically, about suitors who are indisputably unsuitable. Origin: 'Beating heart' has long been used to denote breathless excitement. John Dryden used it was that meaning as early as 1697, in his The works of Virgil:
'My beating heart' was a stock expression for 18th century novelists and poets. It is first recorded in Nicholas Rowe's Tamerlane, a tragedy, 1702:
The earliest citation of the full 'be still, my beating heart' comes from William Mountfort's Zelmane, 1705:
The expression, and the comic manner it is now delivered, was brought to a wide public in Gilbert and Sullivan's opera HMS Pinafore, 1878:
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