The New Timon: A Romance of LondonCarey and Hart, 1846 - 208 sidor |
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amidst Arden Behold beneath betray betray'd blest blood-hound bloom breast breath bride bright brow Calantha calm charm charm'd cheek child clasp confest dark dead Death dews divine dreams earth elder day Elysium ev'n fair fame fate father fear fierce flower Free love funeral pall gaze glide gloom grave grief hand hath haunt heart Heaven honour hope hour hush'd Indian instinct John Thompson kinsman life's light lips lone look Lord Lucy Lucy's man's mind morn Morvale Morvale's mother's murmur Muse night o'er passion pause perchance pity Plato pride pure rill round scorn seem'd shade shame shape shone shrinking sigh silence skies sleep smile soft solemn soothe soul star stern strife strong sweet tale tears thee thine thou thought thrall Thy dreams tomb truth vex'd voice wanderer wave wealth wild word wrong YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY young youth
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Sida 86 - Watch'd, through the hush, the Earth's young mother — Spring ! Calm from the lattice shot a steady ray ; \ Calm on the sward its silvery lustre lay ; And reach'd, to glad, the glancing waves at play. I stood and gazed within the quiet room ; — Gazed on her cheek ; — there, spring had lost its bloom ! Alone she sate ! — Alone ! — that worn-out word, So idly spoken, and so coldly heard ; Yet all that poets sing, and grief hath known, Of hope laid waste, knells in that word — ALONE ! " Who...
Sida 34 - All at rest now — all dust ! — wave flows on wave ; But the sea dries not ! — what to us the grave ? It brings no real homily, we sigh, Pause for awhile and murmur, " all must die !" Then rush to pleasure, action, sin once more, Swell the loud tide, and fret unto the shore.
Sida 37 - Nor gout, nor toil, his freshness can destroy, And Time still leaves all Eton in the boy; First in the class, and keenest in the ring, He saps like Gladstone, and he fights like Spring...
Sida 40 - Dim to all else, but to ourselves the sun; And still, to each, some poor, obscurest life, Breathes all the bliss, or kindles all the strife. Wake up the countless dead! — ask every ghost Whose influence tortured or consoled the most: How each pale spectre of the host would turn From the fresh laurel and the glorious urn, To point, where rots beneath a nameless stone, Some heart in which had ebb'd and flow'd its own! What marvel then that sad Calantha's eye Roved listless o'er the nobler passers-by?
Sida 37 - One after one, the Lords of Time advance; Here Stanley meets — how Stanley scorns ! — the glance. The brilliant chief, irregularly great, Frank, haughty, rash, the Rupert of Debate ; Nor gout nor toil his freshness can destroy, And time still leaves all Eton in the boy.
Sida 183 - Thou ask'st why Christ, so lenient to the deed, So sternly claims the faith which founds the creed ; Because, reposed in faith the soul has calm ; The hope a haven and the wound a balm ; Because the light, dim seen in Reason's dream, On all alike, through faith alone, could stream. God...
Sida 38 - Next cool, and all unconscious of reproach, Comes the calm "Johnny who upset the coach."* How formed to lead, if not too proud to please, — His fame would fire you, but his manners freeze. Like or dislike, he does not care a jot; He wants your vote, but your affection not; Yet human hearts need sun, as well as oats, — So cold a climate plays the deuce with votes.
Sida 6 - And low the form, tho' lightly shaped the limb ; Yet life glowed vigorous in that deep-set eye, With a calm force that dared you to defy; And the small foot was planted on the stone Firm as a gnome's upon his mountain throne ; Simple his garb, yet what the wealthy wear, And conscious power gave lordship to his air. Lone in the Babel thus the maid and man ; Long he gazed silent, and at last began : — "Poor, homeless outcast — dost thou see me stand Close by thy side — yet beg not? Stretch thy...
Sida 29 - was not mirth, for mirth she was too still ; It was not wit, wit leaves the heart more chill; But that continuous sweetness, which, with ease, Pleases all round it, from the wish to please.
Sida 148 - ... and did so. Mrs. Graham, Mrs. Bruce, Belle and the lieutenant, went also in another vehicle; and Emily and Gertrude, according to their original intention, took a different direction, and, driving white Charlie in the old-fashioned buggy, rejoiced in their quiet independence. Chapter XXXI Sporting at will, and moulding sport to art, With that sad holiness — the human heart.