Poetic FragmentsJ. Philipson, 1838 - 232 psl. |
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23 psl.
... Fearful the still frame of the murder'd Knight , Yea , fearful the pale form beside him laid , Yet beautiful the love she there displayed― Love which no Change , Decay , nor Death could sever ; Her swan - white neck , in heavenly grace ...
... Fearful the still frame of the murder'd Knight , Yea , fearful the pale form beside him laid , Yet beautiful the love she there displayed― Love which no Change , Decay , nor Death could sever ; Her swan - white neck , in heavenly grace ...
38 psl.
... fearful interval of peace from the barba- rous persecution of their tyrants . Here they met in doubt and in secrecy , swearing to preserve among these rocks all that was now left them - their liberty - and not unfrequently sealing with ...
... fearful interval of peace from the barba- rous persecution of their tyrants . Here they met in doubt and in secrecy , swearing to preserve among these rocks all that was now left them - their liberty - and not unfrequently sealing with ...
42 psl.
... quaint , on the mouldering wall , The dark and fearful tale recall : How they for love of sordid gold , And man's unblest embrace , Had slain the old man in his sleep ! And then the faithful marble told How justice met them 42.
... quaint , on the mouldering wall , The dark and fearful tale recall : How they for love of sordid gold , And man's unblest embrace , Had slain the old man in his sleep ! And then the faithful marble told How justice met them 42.
58 psl.
... fearful toils and foes unnumber'd , By frost and snow and sleet , and bitter winds encumber'd ? IV . The first , the first sweet flower of spring , The herald of the opening year ! Oh ! how thy praises shall I sing , By all so loved ...
... fearful toils and foes unnumber'd , By frost and snow and sleet , and bitter winds encumber'd ? IV . The first , the first sweet flower of spring , The herald of the opening year ! Oh ! how thy praises shall I sing , By all so loved ...
95 psl.
... fearful pangs of Jealousy succeed To the fierce passion of their headlong youth ; - Most have sunk down into the apathy Which waits all early joys ; some have been faithless : I've a brief tale of such an one to tell . " Beneath yon ...
... fearful pangs of Jealousy succeed To the fierce passion of their headlong youth ; - Most have sunk down into the apathy Which waits all early joys ; some have been faithless : I've a brief tale of such an one to tell . " Beneath yon ...
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Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Abbey Amid Aura Aura's azure skies Babylon battle beam beauty beneath bittern bliss bosom breast breath bright brow charms cheek clouds corse dark dear dearest death deep despair divine doth dreams Dunfermline e'er earth fair fame feel fierce flowers frae gallant gaze gentle glance gleam glide glow gone grace green greenwood tree grief Harold's hast hath heart Heaven hill hope hour light lonely Lord Delaval Love's Mary's Lake melody mountain murmuring ne'er neath never night Norman Norsemen o'er ocean Olden pale pass'd passions peace perish'd poison'd pride pure radiant rapture sacred Saxon scene scorn seem'd seraph smile soft solemn solitude song sorrow soul spirit spring star-beams starry stars stream sunny sweep sweet sweetly tear thee thine thou thoughts thrush train Twas Tynemouth Waltham Abbey warriors wassaile wave wild William dear winds Yarrow young youth Yule Log
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54 psl. - If ever," says Keith, in his Evidence of the Truth of the Christian Religion, " there was a city that seemed to bid defiance to any predictions of its fall, that city was Babylon. It was for a long time the most famous city in the Old World. Its walls, which were reckoned among the wonders of the world, appeared rather like the bulwarks of nature than the workmanship of man.
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54 psl. - If ever there was a city that seemed to bid defiance to any predictions of its fall, that city was Babylon. It was, for a long time, the most famous city in the whole world.* Its walls, which were reckoned among the wonders of the world...
67 psl. - THE eagle hearts of all the North Have left their stormy strand ; The warriors of the world are forth To choose another land ! Again, their long keels sheer the wave, Their broad sheets court the breeze ; Again, the reckless and the brave, Ride lords of weltering seas. Nor swifter from the well-bent bow Can feathered shaft be sped, Than o'er the ocean's flood of snow Their snoring galleys tread.
54 psl. - Yet, while in the plenitude of its power, and, according to the most accurate chronologers, 160 years before the foot of an enemy had entered it, the voice of prophecy pronounced the doom of the mighty and unconquered Babylon. A succession of ages brought it gradually to the dust ; and the gradation of its fall is marked till it sunk at last into utter desolation.
201 psl. - Survey this most * potent hero, whom lately 100,000 knights were eager to serve, -> and whom many nations dreaded, now lying for hours on the « naked ground, spoiled and abandoned by every one !
54 psl. - ... 160 years before the foot of an enemy had entered it, the voice of prophecy pronounced the doom of the mighty and unconquered Babylon. A succession of ages brought it gradually to the dust; and the gradation of its fall is marked till it sunk at last into utter desolation. At a time when nothing but magnificence was around Babylon the great, fallen Babylon was delineated exactly as every traveller now describes its ruins. And the prophecies concerning it may be viewed connectedly from the...
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