Woodnotes of a wanderer [in verse].J. Menzies, 1852 - 275 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-5 van 54
Pagina 13
... light Appeared in all his summer glory dressed , And bade the seas and rivers sparkle bright , And cheered afar the lonely mountain's breast , Whose shaggy top was veiled in vapours white , Where soared , sublime , the eagle o'er her ...
... light Appeared in all his summer glory dressed , And bade the seas and rivers sparkle bright , And cheered afar the lonely mountain's breast , Whose shaggy top was veiled in vapours white , Where soared , sublime , the eagle o'er her ...
Pagina 16
... light of day , Crowds still came forth to join them from the bye- ways , We took in Dreghorn village a short stay ; For having got , as some say , " kin ' o ' dry - ways ; ' * Schoolmaster . A place , like all else , where the greatest ...
... light of day , Crowds still came forth to join them from the bye- ways , We took in Dreghorn village a short stay ; For having got , as some say , " kin ' o ' dry - ways ; ' * Schoolmaster . A place , like all else , where the greatest ...
Pagina 19
... light Of day , far o'er the wide illumined sea , Thy mossy rocks , grey hills , and woodlands green , Where my young soul first talked with things unseen . XIX . Behold the sandy plain here tells a tale Of earth's mutations , to the ...
... light Of day , far o'er the wide illumined sea , Thy mossy rocks , grey hills , and woodlands green , Where my young soul first talked with things unseen . XIX . Behold the sandy plain here tells a tale Of earth's mutations , to the ...
Pagina 21
... light Draw sweets their souls are strangers to : -let's hence ! What mastiff minds the messin's impudence ? XXIII . Next see our buirdly farmers join the throng , Upon their blacks , and browns , and lumb'ring greys ; Blythe as the ...
... light Draw sweets their souls are strangers to : -let's hence ! What mastiff minds the messin's impudence ? XXIII . Next see our buirdly farmers join the throng , Upon their blacks , and browns , and lumb'ring greys ; Blythe as the ...
Pagina 28
John Ramsay. XLI . Enough of this - behold like thought or light They fly - but these are similes too bold ; — To have it like the wind , were something trite , And by - the - bye , I think a little cold ; To say they fly , or unto ...
John Ramsay. XLI . Enough of this - behold like thought or light They fly - but these are similes too bold ; — To have it like the wind , were something trite , And by - the - bye , I think a little cold ; To say they fly , or unto ...
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
ancient auld Ayr Advertiser Ayrshire bard beautiful behold beneath brae breast bright Burns Caledonian Forest chiel church churchyard dame dark dear deep dream Dundonald Castle e'en e'er earth Eglinton Park Meeting Elizabeth Mure fair Fame flowers frae genius Gilsland Græme grave grey hast heard heart heaven hills hoary hour Hughie Spiers John Ramsay Killie Kilmarnock land LANERCOST PRIORY life's light lofty lone look loud Loudon Castle mighty mong mony morn mountain muse Nature's NAWORTH CASTLE ne'er neath night o'er ocean passed poems pride race rock roll roun round ruin scene Scotland seeds of death seen shade shore skelpin smile song soul stand stood strain sublime sweet tale Tannahill tears tell thee things thou tide tower Twas unto vale wave weary wild wind wings
Populaire passages
Pagina 144 - And when he was come near, he beheld the city, and wept over it, saying, If thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this thy day, the things which belong unto thy peace ! but now they are hid from thine eyes.
Pagina 263 - No, faith, not a jot; but to follow him thither with modesty enough, and likelihood to lead it; as thus: Alexander died, Alexander was buried, Alexander returneth...
Pagina 15 - The king of gods begot me : what shall be, Or is, or ever was, in fate, I see. Mine is the' invention of the charming lyre ; Sweet notes and heavenly numbers I inspire.
Pagina 83 - They found it so effectual, or were impressed with so high an opinion of its virtues, that they proposed to keep it and forfeit the money ; but the Laird of Lee would not consent to part with so venerable and so gifted an heirloom. The laird of that time was a High Cavalier, and one of the charges brought against him by the party whom he had to oppose, was that he effected cures by means of necromancy.
Pagina 259 - When all was in sunshine and beauty arrayed ; That dream has departed, how fleeting and vain — Farewell! for I never may see you again. O'er moss and o'er moorland my path soon shall be, The cloud-covered mountain and wide stormy sea, Your beauties will gladden some happier swain — Farewell ! for I never may see you again.
Pagina 83 - ... being transferred to a country of Christians. On the contrary it has been all along, even till the present day, remarkable for medical virtue. It is especially sovereign in the diseases of horned cattle. The mode of administering it is this : — Holding it by the chain, it is three times plumped down into a quantity of water, and once drawn round — three dips and a sweil, as the country people express it — and the cattle or others affected drinking this water, the cure is speedy and effectual....
Pagina 70 - There is given Unto the things of earth, which Time hath bent, A spirit's feeling, and where he hath leant His hand, but broke his scythe, there is a power And magic in the ruin'd battlement, For which the palace of the present hour Must yield its pomp, and wait till ages are its dower.
Pagina 209 - ... Winter storm had shed Its baneful power, And oft returning summer clad In leaf and flower — A redbreast sang of sunshine gone, And dreary winter coming on ; What though his strains had never known The rules of art? They woke to notes of sweetest tone The trembling heart; Bade days return for ever fled, And hopes long laid among the dead, And forms in fairy colours clad, Confused appear; While melting Feeling kindly shed Her warmest tear. When, lo ! a flash, a thund'ring knell, That startled...
Pagina 82 - ... but perfectly transparent. The nature, of the stone cannot be determined by lapidaries, being apparently different in all respects from any known in this quarter of the world. To the edge of the coin a small silver chain has been attached, and the whole is deposited in a gold box, which the Empress Maria Theresa presented to the lather of the late Count Lockhart. The Lee Penny...
Pagina 208 - And skim the dell, While leaves from autumn's sapless spray Down rustling fell. While on a thorn that widely spread Its moss-grown lowly bending head, Where long the winter's storm had shed Its baneful power, And oft returning summer clad In leaf and flower ; A redbreast sang of sunshine gone, And dreary winter coming on : What though his strains had never known The rules of art, They woke to notes of sweetest tone, The trembling heart. Bade days return...