The Emigrant: And Other Poems

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Rollo & Adam, 1861 - 236 páginas
 

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Página 27 - I love my own country and race, Nor lightly I fled from them both, Yet who would remain in a place Where there's too many spoons for the broth ? The squire's preserving his game. He says that God gave it to him, And he'll banish the poor without shame, For touching a feather or limb. The Justice he feels very big, And boasts what the law can secure, But has two different laws in his wig, Which he keeps for the rich and the poor.
Página 95 - And the daisy deck'd with pearls, Richer than the proudest Earls On their mantles wear. These thy preachers of the wild-wood, Keep they not the heart of childhood, Fresh within us still. Spite of all our life's sad story, There are gleams of Thee and glory, In the daffodil.
Página 93 - GOD. GOD of the great old solemn woods, God of the desert solitudes And trackless sea, God of the crowded city vast, God of the present and the past, Can man know Thee ? God of the blue sky overhead, Of the green earth on which we tread, Of time and space, God of the worlds which Time conceals, God of the worlds which Death reveals To all our race, From out Thy wrath the earthquakes leap And shake the world's foundation deep, Till Nature groans: In agony the mountains call, And ocean...
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Página 7 - Bancroft's History of the United States, from the Discovery of the American Continent to the Declaration of Independence, in 1776.
Página 178 - WHERE'ER WE MAY WANDER. Where'er we may wander, What'er be our lot, The heart's first affections, Still cling to the spot, Where first a fond mother, With rapture has prest, Or sung us to slumber, In peace on her breast. Where love first allured us, And fondly we hung, On the magical music, Which fell from her tongue, Tho' wise ones may tell us, 'Twas foolish and vain, Yet when shall we drink of Such glory again. Where hope first beguiled us, And spells o'er us cast, And told us her visions, Of beauty...
Página 202 - We live in a rickety house, In a dirty dismal street, Where the naked hide from day, And thieves and drunkards meet. And pious folks with their tracts, When our dens they enter in, They point to our shirtless backs, As the fruits of beer and gin. And they quote us texts to prove That our hearts are hard as stone, And they feed us with the fact That the fault is all our own. It will be long ere the poor Will learn their grog to shun While it's raiment, food and fire, And religion all in one.

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