Memorials of Many ScenesE. Moxon, 1844 - 203 sider |
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Side 9
... , our heart is strong to shake The falsities that seem . For our bark is on the angle Of a wide and bending stream , Whose bosky banks entangle The eye's divergent beam ; — The ridgy steeps hide in the way , Whither the THE ELD . 9.
... , our heart is strong to shake The falsities that seem . For our bark is on the angle Of a wide and bending stream , Whose bosky banks entangle The eye's divergent beam ; — The ridgy steeps hide in the way , Whither the THE ELD . 9.
Side 14
... seems to have had reference to both these purposes . Even when the edifice no longer re- mained to receive the offerings and adjurations of the trembling seamen , a record of the religion of the place was left ; and , in these late days ...
... seems to have had reference to both these purposes . Even when the edifice no longer re- mained to receive the offerings and adjurations of the trembling seamen , a record of the religion of the place was left ; and , in these late days ...
Side 15
... seems quite impossible , even though the devotee were winged or feathered with all the skill of mechanical art . Sappho , the half - goddess , is the first mortal on record who made the trial , and her attempt is followed by that of ...
... seems quite impossible , even though the devotee were winged or feathered with all the skill of mechanical art . Sappho , the half - goddess , is the first mortal on record who made the trial , and her attempt is followed by that of ...
Side 26
... seems quaking to its heart , But in a current of tumultuous noise , Crash upon crash , -a multitudinous clang Of cymbals beating in the low - hung clouds , - And every shortest interspace filled up With echoes vivid as their parent ...
... seems quaking to its heart , But in a current of tumultuous noise , Crash upon crash , -a multitudinous clang Of cymbals beating in the low - hung clouds , - And every shortest interspace filled up With echoes vivid as their parent ...
Side 28
... seem to have differed from that of the other robber inhabitants of the Grecian mountains , in nothing but the excess of their predatory activity , the rash impartiality with which they conducted their Klephtic enterprises , and ...
... seem to have differed from that of the other robber inhabitants of the Grecian mountains , in nothing but the excess of their predatory activity , the rash impartiality with which they conducted their Klephtic enterprises , and ...
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Memorials of Many Scenes Baron Richard Monckton Milnes Houghton Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2012 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
æther Ali Pasha ancient battle of Marathon bear beauty beneath BISHOP KEN blessed bliss bosom bound breath bright brow calm cliffs dare dark dead dear death deep delight divine dream earth eyes fair faith fall fame fancies fate fear feel gaze glory gold Gondola grace grave Grecian Greece hand heart Heaven Herodotus hills holy hour Italy light living looks memory mortal mountains Naples Nature Nature's never night Nymph o'er Parthenon pass passion Pausanias PELASGIAN Pelion Peneus PETRARCH Phaon plain Poet Poet's pride Provençal pure rest rise rock Rome round Sappho scene scorn sense shame shore smiles song sorrow soul spirit splendour stone stood stranger strong Suli sweet sympathy tears temples thee thine things thou art thought tide toil tomb Traun tremble ULLSWATER Venetian Venice voice waves wonder youth
Populære avsnitt
Side 190 - But above the cross there glistened A golden Coronet. For her the obsequious beadle The inner door flung wide; Lightly, as up a ball-room, Her footsteps seemed to glide,— There might be good thoughts in her, For all her evil pride. But after her a woman Peeped wistfully within, On whose wan face was graven Life's hardest...
Side 93 - Not in the rude compiler's painted shell, But in thine own memorials of live stone, And in the pictures of thy kneeling princes, And in the lofty words on lofty tombs, And in the breath of ancient chroniclers, And in the music of the outer sea.
Side 60 - Or may I woo thee In earlier Sicilian ? or thy smiles Seek as they once were sought, in Grecian isles, By bards who died content on pleasant sward, Leaving great verse unto a little clan ? O, give me their old vigour, and unheard Save of the quiet Primrose, and the span Of heaven and few ears, Rounded by thee, my song should die away Content as theirs, Rich in the simple worship of a day.
Side 99 - I looked, and saw between us and the sun A building on an island, such a one As age to age might add, for uses vile, — A windowless, deformed, and dreary pile ; And on the top an open tower, where hung A bell, which in the radiance swayed and swung...
Side 133 - FIRST ILLUMINATION. TEMPLE ! where Time has wed Eternity, How beautiful Thou art, beyond compare, Now emptied of thy massive majesty, And made so faery-frail, so faery-fair : The lineaments that thou art wont to wear Augustly traced in ponderous masonry, Lie faint as in a woof of filmy air, Within their frames of mellow jewelry. — But yet how sweet the...
Side 174 - That nobler type is realised again In perfect form, and dedicate — to whom ? To a poor Syrian girl, of lowliest name, A hapless creature, pitiful and frail As ever wore her life in sin and shame, — Of whom all histo'ry has this single tale, — " She loved the Christ, she wept beside his grave, And He, for that Love's sake, all else forgave.
Side 137 - Thou the plain utter' ance of a Poet's thought, Thyself at heart a Poet, wilt not scorn : The name, into whose splendour thou wert born, Thou art about to change for that which stands Writ on the proudest work * that mortal hands Have raised from earth, Religion to adorn. Take it rejoicing, — take with thee thy dower, Britain's best blood, and Beauty ever new, Being of mind ; may the cool northern dew Still rest upon thy leaves, transplanted flower ! Mingling thy English nature, pure and true,...
Side 188 - Yet lay he to the sacred wall As close as he was able; The blessed crumbs might almost fall Upon him from God's table. Who was this father of the Church So secret in his glory? In vain might antiquarians...
Side 118 - Something has told me, something in my breast here, Which I am sure is true, that if you keep it, If you will let no other take it from you, Terrible things I cannot bear to think of Must fall upon you. Show me that you love me : Am I not here to be your little servant, Follow your steps, and wait upon your wishes ? " But Christ refuses to yield the terrible plaything, and claims his privilege to be the elder
Side 11 - It is an isle under Ionian skies, Beautiful as a wreck of Paradise, And, for the harbours are not safe and good, This land would have remained a solitude But for some pastoral people native there, Who from the Elysian, clear, and golden air Draw the last spirit of the age of gold, Simple and spirited ; innocent and bold. The blue...