The West Indies, and Other Poems |
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Page 8
... behold ' That maiden world , twin - sister of the old , By nature nursed beyond the jealous sea , ' Denied to ages , but betrothed to me.'2 The winds were prosperous , and the billows bore The brave adventurer to the promised shore ...
... behold ' That maiden world , twin - sister of the old , By nature nursed beyond the jealous sea , ' Denied to ages , but betrothed to me.'2 The winds were prosperous , and the billows bore The brave adventurer to the promised shore ...
Page 36
... behold How they shall cherish him when he is old , Train'd by example from their tenderest youth To deeds of charity and words of truth . ' -Is he not blest ? Behold , at closing day , The negro - village swarms abroad to play ; He ...
... behold How they shall cherish him when he is old , Train'd by example from their tenderest youth To deeds of charity and words of truth . ' -Is he not blest ? Behold , at closing day , The negro - village swarms abroad to play ; He ...
Page 61
... behold ! The glories of a brighter age unfold : Friends of the outcast ! view the accomplish'd plan , The Negro towering to the height of man . The blood of Romans , Saxons , Gauls , and Danes , Swell'd the rich fountain of the Briton's ...
... behold ! The glories of a brighter age unfold : Friends of the outcast ! view the accomplish'd plan , The Negro towering to the height of man . The blood of Romans , Saxons , Gauls , and Danes , Swell'd the rich fountain of the Briton's ...
Page 68
... , " Some resting place for peace . Oh ! that my soul " Could seize the wings of morning ! soon would I " Behold that other world , where yonder sun " Now speeds to dawn in glory . " PART II . Note ' . Page 18 , line 68.
... , " Some resting place for peace . Oh ! that my soul " Could seize the wings of morning ! soon would I " Behold that other world , where yonder sun " Now speeds to dawn in glory . " PART II . Note ' . Page 18 , line 68.
Page 100
... and skies endure ! Yet , lowly Cowslip , while in thee An old unalter'd friend I see , Fresh in perennial prime ; From Spring to Spring behold in me The woes and waste of Time . This fading eye and withering mien Tell what a sufferer 100.
... and skies endure ! Yet , lowly Cowslip , while in thee An old unalter'd friend I see , Fresh in perennial prime ; From Spring to Spring behold in me The woes and waste of Time . This fading eye and withering mien Tell what a sufferer 100.
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Common terms and phrases
Adorn'd Africa age to age anguish beauty behold beneath Bilberries blest bloom BOLEHILL breast breath Casas Charibbean clime Cowslip Creole Planter dark death Derbyshire Dr Pinkard's Notes Dutch Guiana earth eternal fields and woods final doom fire flood flowers forelock o'er glory grave Greenland gulph heart heaven hope hyæna isles joys kiss her tripping light little neck lyre midst milk-maid's path Moravian Brethren morn mountains Mungo Parke Nature's graceful hand Negro night O'er coppice o'er his mane o'er pasture land path they stand peace plains race rest rience roll'd round Scatter'd by Nature's scene scythe shade shine shore skies Slave Trade smiled song soul Spain spirit Spring spurn'd star stoops his little sublime suffering Surinam surse sweet thee thine thou tomb Tossing his forelock trees turn'd vernal voice waves West Indies Where'er wild Willow wind winter's farm-yard bondage woes yellow fever
Popular passages
Page 32 - Touched by remembrance, trembles to that pole; For in this land of heaven's peculiar grace, The heritage of nature's noblest race, There is a spot of earth supremely blest, A dearer, sweeter spot than all the rest...
Page 31 - The wandering mariner, whose eye explores The wealthiest isles, the most enchanting shores, Views not a realm so bountiful and fair, Nor breathes the spirit of a purer air ; In every clime the magnet of his soul, Touched by remembrance, trembles to that pole...
Page 79 - Molian lyre The winds of dark November stray, Touch the quick nerve of every wire, And on its magic pulses play ;— Till all the air around, Mysterious murmurs fill, A strange bewildering dream of sound, Most heavenly sweet, — yet mournful still.
Page 33 - An angel-guard of loves and graces lie ; Around her knees domestic duties meet, And fireside pleasures gambol at her feet. " Where shall that land, that spot of earth be found ?" Art thou a man ? — a patriot ? — look around ; Oh, thou shalt find, howe'er thy footsteps roam, That land thy country, and that spot thy home...
Page 7 - Soft fell the shades, till Cynthia's slender bow Crested the farthest wave, then sunk below: "Tell me, resplendent guardian of the night, Circling the sphere in thy perennial flight, What secret path of heaven thy smiles adorn, What nameless sea reflects thy gleaming horn ?
Page 34 - Man, through all ages of revolving time, Unchanging man, in every varying clime, Deems his own land of every land the pride, Beloved by Heaven o'er all the world beside ; His home the spot of earth supremely blest, A dearer, sweeter spot than all the rest.
Page 102 - The wind that wanders o'er this tomb Was once his vital breath. The roving wind shall pass away, The warming sun forsake the sky ; Thy Brother, in that dreadful day, Shall live, — and never die. THE OLD MAN'S SONG. SHALL Man of frail fruition boast ? Shall life be counted dear, Oft but a moment, and, at most, A momentary year ? There...
Page 104 - JELL me, thou dust beneath my feet, Thou dust that once hadst breath ! Tell me how many mortals meet In this small hill of death ? The Mole, that scoops with curious toil Her subterranean bed, Thinks not she ploughs a human soil, And mines among the dead.
Page 42 - His frame, — a fungus form, of dunghill birth, That taints the air, and rots above the earth ; His soul ; — has he a soul, whose sensual breast Of selfish passions is a serpent's nest ? Who follows headlong, ignorant, and blind, The vague...
Page 125 - HE sought his sire from shore to shore, He sought him day by day ; The prow he track'd was seen no more, Breasting the ocean-spray ; Yet, as the winds his voyage sped, He sail'd above his father's head, Unconscious where it lay, Deep, deep beneath the rolling main ; - — He sought his sire ; he sought in vain. Son of the brave ! no longer weep ; Still with affection true, Along...