Select Poems of Coleridge, Wordsworth, Campbell, LongfellowFrederick Henry Sykes W.J. Gage Company, Limited, 1895 - 360 pages |
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Page xx
... voice That flowed along my dreams . Bathing in the mill - race , plundering the raven's nest , skating , nutting , fishing , such were the golden days of happy boyhood ; and the activities of boyhood lived on in the man . Wordsworth ...
... voice That flowed along my dreams . Bathing in the mill - race , plundering the raven's nest , skating , nutting , fishing , such were the golden days of happy boyhood ; and the activities of boyhood lived on in the man . Wordsworth ...
Page xxxiii
... great land ; In whose sea - odes - as in those shells Where Ocean's voice of majesty Seems still to sound - immortal dwells Old Albion's Spirit of the Sea . " LONGFELLOW . [ S. Longfellow , Life of H. W. CAMPBELL . xxxiii.
... great land ; In whose sea - odes - as in those shells Where Ocean's voice of majesty Seems still to sound - immortal dwells Old Albion's Spirit of the Sea . " LONGFELLOW . [ S. Longfellow , Life of H. W. CAMPBELL . xxxiii.
Page xxxvii
... Voices of the Night , 1839 . Two years later followed Ballads and Other Poems , con- taining other of the poet's best known pieces - The Wreck of the Hesperus , The Village Blacksmith , Maidenhood , Ex- celsior . How familiar these ...
... Voices of the Night , 1839 . Two years later followed Ballads and Other Poems , con- taining other of the poet's best known pieces - The Wreck of the Hesperus , The Village Blacksmith , Maidenhood , Ex- celsior . How familiar these ...
Page 18
... the blood into my head , And I fell down in a swound . How long in that same fit I lay , I have not to declare ; But ere my living life returned , 380 385 390 395 I heard , and in my soul discerned Two voices 18 COLERIDGE .
... the blood into my head , And I fell down in a swound . How long in that same fit I lay , I have not to declare ; But ere my living life returned , 380 385 390 395 I heard , and in my soul discerned Two voices 18 COLERIDGE .
Page 19
... voice , As soft as honey - dew : Quoth he , " The man hath penance done , And penance more will do . " PART VI . FIRST VOICE . BUT tell me , tell me ! speak again , Thy soft response renewing— What makes that ship drive on so fast ...
... voice , As soft as honey - dew : Quoth he , " The man hath penance done , And penance more will do . " PART VI . FIRST VOICE . BUT tell me , tell me ! speak again , Thy soft response renewing— What makes that ship drive on so fast ...
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Common terms and phrases
Acadians Alfoxden ancient Mariner archaic Basil beauty behold Belfry of Bruges bird bright Campbell church Coleridge Composition and publication dark dead death deep dream edition England English Evangeline eyes face father fire flowers forest France French friends Gabriel gleam golden Grand Pré Grasmere hand hath heard heart heaven Hohenlinden King's College Chapel land light living Longfellow looked Lord Nelson loud Lyrical Ballads maiden meadows Milton mist moon morning Nether Stowey night Nova Scotia o'er ocean passed Patrick Spence Percy's Reliques poem poet poet's poetic poetry prairies priest Psalm river rose sails shade shadow Shakspere shining ship shore silent sing sleep song sonnet sorrow soul sound spake spirit spondees stanza stars stood storm sunshine sweet Tennyson thee thou thought tion trees village voice wandered wave wedding-guest William Wordsworth wind words Wordsworth youth