| Chaplet - 1805 - 238 páginas
...that shines with horrow'd light ; The stars that gild the gloomy night ; The seas that roll unnumher'd waves ; The wood that spreads its shady leaves ; The...whose ears conceal the grain, The yellow treasure of (he plain ; — All of these, and all I see, Shoud he sung, and sung hy me : They speak their maker... | |
| 1806 - 408 páginas
...shines with borrow'd light ; The stars that gild the gloomy night; The seas that roll tumumber'd vvavesj The wood that spreads its shady leaves ; The field...Man. Go, search among your idle dreams, Your busy, or yonr rain extremes; And find a life of equal bliss, Or own the next begun in This. A NiGHT-PjucE on... | |
| Walter Scott - 1810 - 308 páginas
...shines with borrow'd light ; The stars, that gild the gloomy night ; The seas, that roll unnumber'd waves ; The wood, that spreads its shady leaves ;...the tongue of man. Go search among your idle dreams, Yonr busy or your vain extremes; And find a life of equal bliss, Or own this next begun in this. XVIII.... | |
| Alexander Chalmers - 1810 - 664 páginas
...gloomy night; ' The seas that roll unnumher'd writes; The wood that sprtads its shady leaves; The Held whose ears conceal the grain. The yellow treasure of the plain; All of these, and all 1 see, Should be sung, and sung by me: They S[>eak their maker as they can, But want and ask the tongue... | |
| William Bengo Collyer - 1812 - 980 páginas
...stars that gild the gloomy night : 2 The seas that roll unnumber'd waves, The wood that spreads it's shady leaves ; . The field whose ears conceal the grain, The yellow treasure of the plain. 3 The whole of these, and all I see, Ought to be sung, and sung by me : They speak their Maker as they... | |
| 1824 - 984 páginas
...difficulty, squeezed himself into a roothouse, when his eye caught the following lines from Parnell : " Go search among your idle dreams, Your busy or your...extremes, And find a life of equal bliss, Or own the next began in this." The Doctor, however, not possessing any Silvan ideas, seemed not to admit that Heaven... | |
| George Horne, William Jones - 1818 - 550 páginas
...inhabitants; all these are ready to instruct us in the mysteries of faith, and the duties of morality : — They speak their Maker as they can, But want and ask the tongue of man. PABNELL. The advantages of Messiah's reign are represented, in some of the Psalms, under images of... | |
| British poets - 1822 - 272 páginas
...that shines with borrow'd light; The stars that gild the gloomy night; The seas that roll unnumber'd waves; The wood that spreads its shady leaves ; The...Maker as they can, But want and ask the tongue of man. A FAIRY TALE. IN THE ANCIENT ENGLISH STYLE. IN Britain's isle, and Arthur's days, When midnight fairies... | |
| 1823 - 714 páginas
...difficulty, squeezed himself into a roothouse, when his eye caught the following lines from Parncll : " Go search among your idle dreams, Your busy, or your...extremes, And find a life of equal bliss, Or own the next began in this." 389 The Doctor, however, not possessing any Silvan ideas, seemed not to admit that... | |
| Central Universalist Society (Boston, Mass.) - 1823 - 408 páginas
...shines with borrow'd light, The stars that gild the gloomy night : 2 The seas that roll unnumber'd waves, The wood that spreads its shady leaves ; The...conceal the grain, The yellow treasure of the plain : 3 The whole of these and all I see, Ought to be sung, and sung by me ; They speak their Maker as... | |
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