The Podesta's Daughter: And Other Miscellaneous PoemsA. Hart, 1852 - 156 páginas |
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Página 31
... carved screen , And with his impious hand sheer through the glass Of the great window - through the very Christ- Hurled a great oaken settle , overweight For two stout yeomen . Said the old duke naught ? Yes , merely this " Let all the ...
... carved screen , And with his impious hand sheer through the glass Of the great window - through the very Christ- Hurled a great oaken settle , overweight For two stout yeomen . Said the old duke naught ? Yes , merely this " Let all the ...
Página 60
... Carving a Christ from the ivory bone . Little by little , with toil and pain , He won his way through the sightless grain , That held and yet hid the thing he sought , Till the work stood up , a growing thought . And all around him ...
... Carving a Christ from the ivory bone . Little by little , with toil and pain , He won his way through the sightless grain , That held and yet hid the thing he sought , Till the work stood up , a growing thought . And all around him ...
Página 61
... Carving your Christ from the ivory bone ? O carve , I pray you , some fairy ships , Or rings for the weaning infant's lips , Or toys for yon princely boy who stands Knee - deep in the bloom of his father's lands , And waits for his idle ...
... Carving your Christ from the ivory bone ? O carve , I pray you , some fairy ships , Or rings for the weaning infant's lips , Or toys for yon princely boy who stands Knee - deep in the bloom of his father's lands , And waits for his idle ...
Página 62
... carve you something of solid worth— Leave heaven to heaven , come , earth to earth . Carve that thy hearth - stone may glimmer bright , And thy children laugh in dancing light . " Steadily answered the carver's lips , As he brushed from ...
... carve you something of solid worth— Leave heaven to heaven , come , earth to earth . Carve that thy hearth - stone may glimmer bright , And thy children laugh in dancing light . " Steadily answered the carver's lips , As he brushed from ...
Página 65
... Carving this Christ from the ivory bone ? Unlovely the figure , and passing grim With cramping tortures in every limb . A ghastly sight is the open wound , The wicked nails , and the sharp thorns bound O'er his heavy brow's crowned ...
... Carving this Christ from the ivory bone ? Unlovely the figure , and passing grim With cramping tortures in every limb . A ghastly sight is the open wound , The wicked nails , and the sharp thorns bound O'er his heavy brow's crowned ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Podesta's Daughter and Other: Miscellaneous Poems (Classic Reprint) George Henry Boker Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
Términos y frases comunes
amid Anselm aspiring towers Bacche bear beneath billows blazing blood bosom breath bright brow burst calm Carving charms beneath Christ clouds cottage Count Odo crooking finger crystal planets darkness death dost DUKE ODO dull earth eyes face father fear flaming Florio flowers forever fruitful fur clothing gaze Giulia glance glow golden grass Grocer's daughter hand Hark haughty hear heart heaven heavenly hills holy ivory bone labor laugh light lips look maiden martial music miracle mortal murmur night nodding o'er Odo's pain pardon passion planet PODESTA priests proud roar rose round royal gem sail saint Satyr shadows shone shout shrink silent singing Sir John Franklin smile solemn song soul spirit spoke star sweet tears thee thing thou thought Thrice cursed throng toil trees trembling turbid current Twas waves ween wine winter wonder words wrath
Pasajes populares
Página 129 - The summer went, the winter came, — We could not rule the year ; But summer will melt the ice again, And open a path to the sunny main, Whereon our ships shall steer...
Página 130 - Sir John, where are the English fields.' And where are the English trees ? And where are the little English flowers That open in the breeze ? ' ' " Be still, be still, my brave sailors! You shall see the fields again, And smell the scent of the opening flowers. The grass and the waving grain." " Oh ! when shall I see my orphan child? My Mary waits for me.
Página 125 - Between your land and the polar star My goodly vessels go." " Come down, if you would journey there," The little Indian said ; " And change your cloth for fur clothing, Your vessel for a sled.
Página 128 - A sled were better than a ship, To cruise through ice and snow. Down sank the baleful crimson sun, The northern light came out, And glared upon the ice-bound ships, And shook its spears about.
Página 125 - My goodly vessels go. Come down, if you would journey there, The little Indian said ; And change your cloth for fur clothing, Your vessel for a sled. But lightly laughed the stout Sir John, And the crew laughed with him too : — A sailor to change from ship to sled, I ween, were something new ! All through the long, long polar day, The vessels westward sped ; And wherever the sail of Sir John was blown, The ice gave way and fled : Gave way with many a hollow groan, And with many a surly roar, But...
Página 131 - Oh, think you, good Sir John Franklin. We'll ever see the land ? 'Twas cruel to send us here to starve Without a helping hand.
Página 60 - Silently sat the artist alone, Carving a Christ from the ivory bone. Little by little with toil and pain, He won his way through the sightless grain, That held and yet hid the thing he sought, Till the work stood up, a growing thought.
Página 128 - Down sank the baleful crimson sun, The northern light came out, And glared upon the ice-bound ships, And shook its spears about. The snow came down, storm breeding storm, And on the decks was laid : Till the weary sailor, sick at heart, Sank down beside his spade. Sir John ! the night is black and long, The hissing wind is bleak, The hard green ice is strong as death : — I prithee, Captain ! speak ! The night is neither bright nor short, The singing breeze is cold : The ice is not so strong as...
Página 126 - Gave way with many a hollow groan, And with many a surly roar ; But it murmured and threatened on every side, And closed where he sailed before. " Ho ! see ye not, my merry men, The broad and open sea ? Bethink ye what the whaler said, Think of the little Indian's sled !" The crew laughed out in glee. " Sir John, Sir John, 'tis bitter cold, The scud drives on the breeze, The ice comes looming from the north, The very sunbeams freeze.
Página 124 - The ice was here, the ice was there, The ice was all around: It cracked and growled, and roared and howled, Like noises in a swound...