Walks in the CountryMoxon, 1844 - 170 páginas |
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Página 3
... glow Light had invested Eden - heaven below : Then the first orisons in grove and glade Aerial voices sang - ere man was made . On such a day as this the Poet pure * Pour'd forth his grateful verse , that will endure * Thomson . As long ...
... glow Light had invested Eden - heaven below : Then the first orisons in grove and glade Aerial voices sang - ere man was made . On such a day as this the Poet pure * Pour'd forth his grateful verse , that will endure * Thomson . As long ...
Página 5
... glow . Roses are wreathed around the cottage walls , And ivy o'er the crumbling ruin falls ; Thus blooms the rose on rural maiden's cheek , And age looks cheerful though infirm and weak . The sweetest flower is shelter'd from our gaze ...
... glow . Roses are wreathed around the cottage walls , And ivy o'er the crumbling ruin falls ; Thus blooms the rose on rural maiden's cheek , And age looks cheerful though infirm and weak . The sweetest flower is shelter'd from our gaze ...
Página 9
... Glowing beneath the Day - God's blazing car . But knowledge is to good or ill allied As colour'd by humility or pride . As wave atlantic , urged by wintry gales , A mural pile of porphyry assails ; Thus mob - impelled , ambitious ...
... Glowing beneath the Day - God's blazing car . But knowledge is to good or ill allied As colour'd by humility or pride . As wave atlantic , urged by wintry gales , A mural pile of porphyry assails ; Thus mob - impelled , ambitious ...
Página 42
... glow ; And never rests , its energy unspent , With its transmitted effluence content ; But daily renovates its virtue , still Created things with joy intense to fill . NOTES To MAY , IN 1843 . P. 33 , 42 MAY , IN 1843 .
... glow ; And never rests , its energy unspent , With its transmitted effluence content ; But daily renovates its virtue , still Created things with joy intense to fill . NOTES To MAY , IN 1843 . P. 33 , 42 MAY , IN 1843 .
Página 65
... glows . Would it on social good its powers employ- How many now deprest might life enjoy . The fashion of the world must pass away-- How emblem'd in the wither'd leaf's decay ! Man feels it as he contemplates the lost Pride of the woods ...
... glows . Would it on social good its powers employ- How many now deprest might life enjoy . The fashion of the world must pass away-- How emblem'd in the wither'd leaf's decay ! Man feels it as he contemplates the lost Pride of the woods ...
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Términos y frases comunes
adore appear art anew autumn beautiful behold bright brighten Canova Cerito charms cheer Claudius cloud Corn Laws crown Dante decay deep'ning divine E'en earth eloquence energy faith fame fancy fashion's feel flow foliage France gaudy flowers gaze gazelles Genius gilds glade glittering glorious glory glow gospel-truths grace grandeur Greece green heart Heaven Hebe hope human illume knowledge light line 13 lustre mighty mind mists mural pile myriad-minded NAPOLEON nations nature ne'er noble Noble Kinsmen o'er o'er-rank oaks onward orbs Poesy Poet pride proud religion retina rising rose sacred Sage sapphires sentiment seraph Shakspere shine sing smiles social song soul spirits splendour spring stars statesmen STONELEIGH stream strive sublime sweet Taste Thee things THOUGHTS AT WHITSUNTIDE thousand throne tis nature's toil Truth UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA unroll'd verdure virtue wealth WHITEFRIARS wing wintry gales woes WORDSWORTH ΤΟ
Pasajes populares
Página 50 - One song employs all nations, and all cry, ' Worthy the Lamb, for he was slain for us ! ' The dwellers in the vales and on the rocks Shout to each other, and the mountain tops From distant mountains catch the flying joy : Till nation after nation taught the strain, Earth rolls the rapturous Hosanna round.
Página 25 - E'er wore his crown as loftily as he Wears the green coronal of leaves with which Thy hand has graced him. Nestled at his root Is beauty, such as blooms not in the glare Of the broad sun. That delicate forest flower With scented breath, and look so like a smile...
Página 16 - There are a sort of men whose visages Do cream and mantle like a standing pond...
Página 48 - We have often thought that the motion of the public mind in our country resembles that of the sea when the tide is rising. Each successive wave rushes forward, breaks, and rolls back ; but the great flood is steadily coming in.
Página 134 - Tous les corps, le firmament, les étoiles, la terre et ses royaumes, ne valent pas le moindre des esprits; car il connaît tout cela, et soi; et les corps, rien. Tous les corps ensemble, et tous les esprits ensemble, et toutes leurs productions, ne valent pas le moindre mouvement de charité; cela est d'un ordre infiniment plus élevé.
Página 117 - Your KEMBLE'S spirit was the home Of genius and of taste : — Taste like the silent dial's power, That when supernal light is given, Can measure inspiration's hour, And tell its height in heaven. At once ennobled and correct, His mind survey'd the tragic page, And what the actor could effect, The scholar could presage.
Página 43 - ... and what a native and happy ease in the conclusion ! The busy lark, the messenger of day, Saleweth* in her song the morrow gray ; And fiery Phoebus riseth up so bright, That all the orient laugheth of the sight...
Página 133 - What soul was his, when, from the naked top Of some bold headland, he beheld the sun Rise up, and bathe the world in light...
Página 45 - These formulae, emblematic of Omniscience, condense into a few symbols the immutable laws of the universe. This mighty instrument of human power itself originates in the primitive constitution of the human mind, and rests upon a few fundamental axioms, which have eternally existed in Him who implanted them in the breast of man when He created him after His own image.
Página 15 - But the most sublime scene is where a mural pile of porphyry, escaping the process of disintegration that is devastating the coast, appears to have been left as a sort of rampart against the inroads of the ocean ; the Atlantic, when provoked by wintry gales, batters against it with all the force of real artillery, the waves having, in their repeated assaults, forced themselves an entrance.