Songs of the Heart: Poems on Various Subjectsauthor, 1871 - 111 pages |
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Page 8
... MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR " THE NEW YEAR'S BELLS ... THE ATLANTIC CABLE THE SHOWER OF STARS ... ... ... ... ... THE MONARCHS OF THE NILE ENGLAND TO IRELAND ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 103 ... ... 105 A WELCOME TO ...
... MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR " THE NEW YEAR'S BELLS ... THE ATLANTIC CABLE THE SHOWER OF STARS ... ... ... ... ... THE MONARCHS OF THE NILE ENGLAND TO IRELAND ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 103 ... ... 105 A WELCOME TO ...
Page 36
... merry brooks replied : While troops of happy children , The hidden glades among , Swelled with their cheerful chorus The universal song . And still , as Spring rejoicing , Her pleasant journey ran , She ever lingered lightly Above the ...
... merry brooks replied : While troops of happy children , The hidden glades among , Swelled with their cheerful chorus The universal song . And still , as Spring rejoicing , Her pleasant journey ran , She ever lingered lightly Above the ...
Page 40
... merry boy , While the glades re - echoed To my shouts of joy . Seeking nuts or berries , Eager roamed I there , Mocked the hidden cuckoo , Roused the startled hare ; Or , some nest to plunder , Climbed the topmost trees , Swung upon ...
... merry boy , While the glades re - echoed To my shouts of joy . Seeking nuts or berries , Eager roamed I there , Mocked the hidden cuckoo , Roused the startled hare ; Or , some nest to plunder , Climbed the topmost trees , Swung upon ...
Page 41
... merry freshness Of the new - born day ; And the spring - tide flowers Seem not half so gay ; Gone the dear companions Of my early choice ; And all hushed the accents Of that cherished voice . Yet , when I re - visit Each familiar spot ...
... merry freshness Of the new - born day ; And the spring - tide flowers Seem not half so gay ; Gone the dear companions Of my early choice ; And all hushed the accents Of that cherished voice . Yet , when I re - visit Each familiar spot ...
Page 48
... merry is its voice : But happier glides the strain along Of that unhesitating song . Over the meadow - grass , And underneath the trees , With rustle soft , doth pass The newly - wakened breeze : But sweeter on the ear there floats The ...
... merry is its voice : But happier glides the strain along Of that unhesitating song . Over the meadow - grass , And underneath the trees , With rustle soft , doth pass The newly - wakened breeze : But sweeter on the ear there floats The ...
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Common terms and phrases
Art thou bade beams beauty beneath blessed breast breath breath of heaven breeze bright brow cheer clouds crown cuckoo dark dear old home distant dreams drear ears England evermore eyes fades fainting fair fast feet fell firmly clasps flowers fresh gather gentle gleam gloom glory golden green grief happy Harvard College heard heart heaven HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW hill holy honour hopes hymns light little hand look LUDGATE HILL meadows meadows green merry Merry Christmas mighty morning ne'er night numbers o'er once onward path pathway peaceful playmates pleasant pow'r ranks of error rest rise roam Sabbath scene scent shadows shine sight sing song soothing sorrow soul sound spirit star storms strive summer sunbeams sweet tears tempest tender touch thee thine thou thoughts tide Tis a voice underneath violet Wallingford weary winds winter woods I wandered youth
Popular passages
Page 84 - This England never did, (nor never shall,) Lie at the proud foot of a conqueror, But when it first did help to wound itself. Now these her princes are come home again, Come the three corners of the world in arms, And we shall shock them : Nought shall make us rue, If England to itself do rest but true.
Page 3 - Read from some humbler poet. Whose songs gushed from his heart. As showers from the clouds of summer. Or tears from the eyelids start; Who, through long days of labor.
Page 24 - And he stayed yet other seven days; and again he sent forth the dove out of the ark; and the dove came in to him in the evening; and, lo, in her mouth was an olive leaf pluckt off: so Noah knew that the waters were abated from off the earth.
Page 47 - what music hast thou provided for thy saints in heaven, when thou affordest bad men such music on earth?" There appears to be a meaning in the sound beyond what reaches the ear ; it links itself with the aspects of nature, with the spirit of the hour, or blends with the sad reminiscence or the hopeful reverie, like its echo or response. There is, too, a metaphysical...
Page 108 - Published under the sanction of the National Society for Aid to the Sick and Wounded in War.
Page 57 - ... they pass Bear the scent of dew-besprinkled grass And the odor of flowers sweet. I have watched the shades of twilight glide Over the peaceful scene, Till the stars stole forth on the heavens wide, And the moonbeams fell on the tranquil tide In floods of silver sheen. O, there is no vale that ever I knew That has such charms for me, Where the earth assumes a brighter hue, And the sky seems tinged with a deeper blue, And the flowers more fair to see. And still contented shall be my lot, Whether...
Page 56 - THERE'S a quiet place where I often go When the sun is in the west, And the evening breezes, as they blow O'er the trees above and the lake below, Seem sighing themselves to rest ; Where under the bank beneath the feet There lies a hidden well; Where the hanging boughs the waters meet, And the moor-hen finds a safe retreat, And the white swan loves to dwell.
Page 57 - ... hill, And, the arching boughs of the trees between, The broad expanse of the meadows green Lie peacefully and still. I have seen the water smooth as glass, Or the ripples o'er it fleet, When the winds that move it as they pass Bear the scent of dew-besprinkled grass And the odour of flowers sweet. I have watched the shades of twilight glide Over the peaceful scene, Till the stars stole forth on the heavens wide, And the moonbeams fell on the tranquil tide In floods of silver sheen* Oh there is...
Page 68 - REST. REST for the labourer, rest ! When the daylight slowly dies, When the shadows creep, and welcome sleep Comes to the weary eyes.
Page 69 - When the struggle of life is o'er, When the race is run, and the crown is won, Rest ! and for evermore.