Old-world Idylls, and Other VersesK. Paul, Trench, Trübner & Company, Limited, 1883 - 245 psl. |
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104 psl.
... smile May not be controverted ! " She smiled once more- " My book , I find , Observes some modern doctors Would make the Cynics out a kind Of album - verse concoctors . " 66 Then I " Why not ? Ephesian law , No less than time's ...
... smile May not be controverted ! " She smiled once more- " My book , I find , Observes some modern doctors Would make the Cynics out a kind Of album - verse concoctors . " 66 Then I " Why not ? Ephesian law , No less than time's ...
115 psl.
... Fred ! " Next . with a pause , -she bent the while Over a rose , with roguish smile- " But how disgusted , sir , you'll be To hear I scrawled that ' Dorothy . " " AVICE . " On serait tenté de lui dire , DOROTHY . 115.
... Fred ! " Next . with a pause , -she bent the while Over a rose , with roguish smile- " But how disgusted , sir , you'll be To hear I scrawled that ' Dorothy . " " AVICE . " On serait tenté de lui dire , DOROTHY . 115.
123 psl.
... smile ; And , e'en when none were looking on , His air was always woe - begone . He kept , I think , his bosom bare To imitate Jean Paul ; His solitary topics were Esthetics , Fate , and Soul ; - Although at times , but not for long ...
... smile ; And , e'en when none were looking on , His air was always woe - begone . He kept , I think , his bosom bare To imitate Jean Paul ; His solitary topics were Esthetics , Fate , and Soul ; - Although at times , but not for long ...
141 psl.
... smile that shone when she , Of old , was tender . Once more we trod the Golden Way , - That mother you saw yesterday , And I , whom none can well portray As young , or slender . She twirled the flimsy scarf about Her pretty head , and ...
... smile that shone when she , Of old , was tender . Once more we trod the Golden Way , - That mother you saw yesterday , And I , whom none can well portray As young , or slender . She twirled the flimsy scarf about Her pretty head , and ...
149 psl.
... near , And circles , like a cat around a cage , To snatch the surplus . THE PRINCESS . CHERUBIN , the page . ' Tis but a child , yet with that roguish smile , And those sly looks , the child will make hearts THE IDYLL OF THE CARP . 149.
... near , And circles , like a cat around a cage , To snatch the surplus . THE PRINCESS . CHERUBIN , the page . ' Tis but a child , yet with that roguish smile , And those sly looks , the child will make hearts THE IDYLL OF THE CARP . 149.
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ÆGROTUS Alcestis Autonoë BABETTE BALLAD BARON BEAU BROCADE beauty Belle Marquise bird Blithe Boucher bright bright eyes brow Caliph CHALCEDONY comes COUNTESS Cupid's Alley dance dead dear DENISE Dorothy dream e'en eyes face faded fair feet flowers FRANÇOIS BOUCHER FRANK GEORGE the Guard gone grace gray green grew hair hand heart John KENSINGTON GARDENS king more terrible kissed knew L'ÉTOILE last year's nest laughing LAWRENCE lips London stones look Love's M'sieu Madam Maid Monsieur Muse NELLIE NINETTE NINON o'er Odysseus once pale pipe Plato POET poor PRINCESS Procris rhyme RONDEAU Rose Rosina round shade Shepherdess Dorine adored sigh sing smile song Stand and Deliver stirred strange sweet tears terrible than Death thee THEOCRITUS There's thing thou thought thrush to-day turned Twas twixt VIEUXBOIS VILLANELLE watch weary wind-flower word yore
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236 psl. - ... his saints and his gilded stern-frames He had thought like an egg-shell to crack us ; .Now Howard may get to his Flaccus, And Drake to his Devon again, And Hawkins bowl rubbers to Bacchus For where are the galleons of Spain ? Let his Majesty hang to St. James The axe that he whetted to hack us ; He must play at some lustier games Or at sea he can hope to out-thwack us ; To his mines of Peru he would pack us To tug at his bullet and chain ; Alas ! that his Greatness should lack -us ! But...
214 psl. - Love comes back to his vacant dwelling The old, old Love that we knew of yore ! We see him stand by the open door, With his great eyes sad, and his bosom swelling. " He makes as though in our arms repelling He fain would lie, as he lay before ; Love comes back to his vacant dwelling...
104 psl. - My book in turn avers (No author's name is stated) That sometimes those Philosophers Are sadly mis-translated." " But hear, the next's in stronger style : The Cynic School asserted That two red lips which part and smile May not be controverted ! " She smiled once more "My book, I find, Observes some modern doctors Would make the Cynics out a .kind Of album-verse concoctors." Then I "Why not? ' Ephesian law, No less than time's tradition, Enjoined fair speech on all who saw Diana's apparition.
4 psl. - The fresher modern traces ; For idle mallet, hoop, and ball Upon the lawn were lying ; A magazine, a tumbled shawl, Round which the swifts were flying ; And, tossed beside the Guelder rose, A heap of rainbow knitting, Where, blinking in her pleased repose, A Persian cat was sitting. " A place to love in, live, for aye, If we too, like Tithonus, Could find some God to stretch the gray...
239 psl. - There is place and enough for the pains of prose ; But whenever a scent from the whitethorn blows. And the jasmine-stars...
4 psl. - You'd surely say Some tea-board garden-maker Had planned it in Dutch William's day To please some florist Quaker, So trim it was. The yew-trees still, With pious care perverted, Grew in the same grim shapes ; and still The lipless dolphin spurted ; Still in his wonted state abode The broken-nosed Apollo ; And still the cypress-arbour showed The same umbrageous hollow.
173 psl. - Spring comes laughing By vale and hill, By wind-flower walking And daffodil, Sing stars of morning, Sing morning skies, Sing blue of speedwell, And my Love's eyes. When comes the Summer, Full-leaved and Strong, And gay birds gossip The orchard long, Sing hid, sweet honey That no bee sips ; Sing red, red roses, And my Love's lips.
74 psl. - M. VIEUXBOIS (murmuring) Ah, PAUL ! ... old PAUL ! . . . EULALIE too ! And ROSE ! . . . And O ! ' the sky so blue ! ' BABETTE (sings) ' One had my Mother's eyes, Wistful and mild ; One had my Father's face ; One was a Child : All of them bent to me, Bent down and smiled ! ' (He is asleep !) M. VIEUXBOIS (almost inaudibly) How I forget ! I am so old ! . . . Good night, BABETTE ! 4.67.
161 psl. - ... died ; Message or wish, may be; Smooth the folds out and see. Hardly the worst of us Here could have smiled !Only the tremulous Words of a child ; Prattle, that has for stops Just a few ruddy drops. Look. She is sad to miss, Morning and night, His her dead father's kiss ; Tries to be bright, Good to mamma, and sweet. That is all.
135 psl. - So with the rest. Who will may trace "Behind the new each elder face Defined as clearly; Science proceeds, and man stands still; Our " world " today's as good or ill, As cultured (nearly), As yours was, Horace!