Birds and Flowers: And Other Country Things |
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abbey-gardens ancient apple-tree azure skies beautiful Behold bird blessed blue bold bough bower bright brown Captain Carrion Crow child creature croaks cuckoo deep delight Dor-hawk Dost doth earth eyes fair fairy falconers feathered flax flax-flower flowers forest garden gay goshawk gold goodly green grow groweth harebell hark hath hear heard heart heigh-ho hill hollow ivy-bush Jack Sparrow ladies land laugh Little streams lone lonesome glen loud Mabel mandrake root MARY HOWITT merry miller's son mong moorland mother mountain neath nests night noble o'er Oak-tree PARROT passion-flower pheasant pleasant Poll poor RAVEN rich rose round sea-gull seen shining shout sing snap-dragon snow Sparrow stormy strong summer sunny sunshine sweet tawny owl thee there's thine thing thou art thou canst titmouse tree unto voice wasp waters waves wild Willow-herb wings Winter-burn wood Woodpecker yellow young
Popular passages
Page 114 - THE USE OF FLOWERS. By MARY HOWITT. GOD might have bade the earth bring forth Enough for great and small, The oak-tree, and the cedar-tree, Without a flower at all.
Page 186 - When on the breath of autumn breeze, From pastures dry and brown, Goes floating, like an idle thought, The fair, white thistle-down ; 0, then what joy to walk at will Upon the golden harvest-hill!
Page 20 - His gardeners young anil old ; He never takes a spade in hand, Nor worketh in the mould. It is not with the poor man so, — Wealth, servants, he has none ; And all the work that's done for him Must by himself be done.
Page 200 - And go now," said the grandmother, " Since falling is the dew, Go down unto the lonesome glen, And milk the mother-ewe ! " All down into the lonesome glen, Through copses thick and wild, Through moist rank grass, by trickling streams, Went on the willing child. And when she came to the lonesome glen, She kept beside the burn, And neither plucked the strawberry-flower Nor broke the lady-fern.
Page 115 - Might yet have drunk them all. Then wherefore, wherefore were they made, All dyed with rainbow light, All fashioned with supremest grace, Upspringing day and night, — Springing in valleys green and low And on the mountains high, And in the silent wilderness, Where no man passes by ! Our outward life requires them not, — Then wherefore had they birth ? To minister delight to man, To beautify the earth ; To comfort man, to whisper hope Whene'er his faith is dim ; For whoso careth for the flowers...
Page 63 - Down in valleys green and lowly, Murmuring not and gliding slowly ; Up in mountain hollows wild. Fretting like a peevish child; Through the hamlet, where all day In their waves the children play, — Running west, or running east. Doing good to man and beast, Always giving, weary never, Little streams, I love you ever ! THE WOLF.
Page 188 - Mid ripe ears on the Sabbath-day. O golden fields of bending corn. How beautiful they seem ! The reaper-folk, the piled-up sheaves, To me are like a dream : The sunshine and the very air Seem of old time, and take me there. — MARY...
Page 132 - The merry mill-stream dashes Down to the sea below : But in the quiet hollows The red trout groweth prime. For the miller and the miller's son To angle when they 've time.
Page 119 - To tell of sunny hours. While the trees are leafless, While the fields are bare, Buttercups and Daisies Spring up here and there.
Page 89 - OH the white sea-gull, the wild sea-gull, A joyful bird is he, As he lies like a cradled thing at rest In the arms of the sunny sea ! The little waves rock to and fro, And the white gull lies asleep, As the fisher's bark, with breeze and tide, Goes merrily over the deep. The ship, with her fair sails set, goes by, And her people stand to note How the sea-gull sits on the rocking waves As still as an anchored boat.