Death; with other poems |
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Page 19
... felt , from Pleasure's sated eye . Then come , creative Spirit ! plume thy strength , Unwreath thy wings , Imagination , wake ! Traverse the troubled world from shore to shore , That with a panoramic glance my soul May vision forth dark ...
... felt , from Pleasure's sated eye . Then come , creative Spirit ! plume thy strength , Unwreath thy wings , Imagination , wake ! Traverse the troubled world from shore to shore , That with a panoramic glance my soul May vision forth dark ...
Page 39
... of affianced hearts , Each into each with holy rapture pour'd ; Now is the spring - time of the soul , whose bloom Is love , ne'er felt but once , and ne'er but once Enjoy'd ! On would ye float for ever thus , E 2 DEATH . 39.
... of affianced hearts , Each into each with holy rapture pour'd ; Now is the spring - time of the soul , whose bloom Is love , ne'er felt but once , and ne'er but once Enjoy'd ! On would ye float for ever thus , E 2 DEATH . 39.
Page 52
... felt the very dust That in our daily walks we tread , hath once Some breathing mould of beauty been ! O earth Thou grave , and mother ! —in thy hollow breast What faded myriads are entomb'd ! -Give back Your dead , departed Ages ; and ...
... felt the very dust That in our daily walks we tread , hath once Some breathing mould of beauty been ! O earth Thou grave , and mother ! —in thy hollow breast What faded myriads are entomb'd ! -Give back Your dead , departed Ages ; and ...
Page 70
... felt in the mind , and by the act Reveal'd , -we perish on the rock of sin ! - King of the Universe ! impress , we pray , Upon our minds Thy majesty , that breathes A holy freshness through the heart ; and raise And animate the soul to ...
... felt in the mind , and by the act Reveal'd , -we perish on the rock of sin ! - King of the Universe ! impress , we pray , Upon our minds Thy majesty , that breathes A holy freshness through the heart ; and raise And animate the soul to ...
Page 87
... Felt in the soul , and in the eye reveal'd.— ' Twas one of those immortal hours , when man , Unheedful of the jarring world , feels thoughts Within him too sublime for words , - -a sense Of that Divinity which breathes o'er all , Making ...
... Felt in the soul , and in the eye reveal'd.— ' Twas one of those immortal hours , when man , Unheedful of the jarring world , feels thoughts Within him too sublime for words , - -a sense Of that Divinity which breathes o'er all , Making ...
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Common terms and phrases
adored amid angels archangelic Art thou awful awhile beam Beatified beauty Behold bliss bloom bowers breath breeze bright brow cheek cherub cloud coach dark dead death deep delight divine domes doom doom'd dread dream earth echoes eternity face faded fairy fancy feeling fire flowers gaze genius glance gleams gloom glorious glory glow glow'd grace grave Hallelujah hath haunt heart heaven Hell holy host hour hush'd immortal isles laugh light lips living look Love eternity lyre melt midnight mind mingled morn mournful muse music roll night o'er ocean Oystermouth passion pensive rapture roam ROBERT MONTGOMERY roll roll'd round scene seraphic shade shadow shining smile sorrow soul sound spirit STAGE COACH stamp'd street sublime sweet tears tempest thee thine thou thought throne thunder tomb trance truth vale vision voice walk watch'd waves wind wings wither'd young
Popular passages
Page 161 - We are not happy, sweet ! our state Is strange and full of doubt and fear ; More need of words that ills abate ; — Reserve or censure come not near Our sacred friendship, lest there be No solace left for thee and me.
Page 157 - THE flower that smiles to-day To-morrow dies; All that we wish to stay Tempts and then flies. What is this world's delight? Lightning that mocks the night, Brief even as bright.
Page 235 - Live not the stars and mountains ? Are the waves Without a spirit? Are the dropping caves Without a feeling in their silent tears? No, no : — they woo and clasp us to their spheres, Dissolve this clog and clod of clay before Its hour, and merge our soul in the great shore.
Page 57 - How pure The grace, the gentleness, of virtuous age ! Though solemn, not austere ; though wisely dead To passion, and the wildering dreams of hope, Not unalive to tenderness and truth, — The good old man is honour'd and revered, And breathes upon the young-limb'd race around A gray and venerable charm of years.
Page 236 - ... into nature, and to eternity advancing into the fathomless depths of the divine perfections. In this thought there is nothing but what doth honour to these glorified spirits ; provided still it be remembered, that their desire of more proceeds not from their disrelishing what they possess; and the pleasure of a new enjoyment is not with them measured by its novelty (which is a thing merely foreign and accidental), but by its real intrinsic value.
Page 6 - All that we love and feel on Nature's face, Bear dim relations to our common doom. The clouds that blush, and die a beamy death, Or weep themselves away in rain, — the streams That flow along in dying music, — leaves That fade, and drop into the frosty arms Of Winter, there to mingle with dead flowers, — Are all prophetic of our own decay.
Page 237 - I have heard it said that he was a person whose life was not productive of events considerable enough to furnish matter for a history. But they who judge thus, have taken but a superficial view of human life, and do not rightly measure the importance of the different events which happen to different sorts of men.
Page 24 - And, like the sky-bird, hail the bright-cheek'd morn With gleeful song, then o'er the bladed mead To chase the blue-wing'd butterfly, or play With curly streams ; or, led by watchful love, To hear the chorus of the trooping waves, When the young breezes laugh them into life ! Or listen to the mimic...
Page 236 - ... proceeds not from their disrelishing what they possess; and the pleasure of a new enjoyment is not with them measured by its novelty (which is a thing merely foreign and accidental), but by its real intrinsic value. After an acquaintance of many thousand years with the works of God, the beauty and magnificence of the creation fills them with the same pleasing wonder and profound awe which Adam felt himself seized with as he first opened his eyes upon this glorious scene.
Page 23 - Joy lights his brow, and Pleasure rolls his eye, While Innocence, from out the budding lip Darts her young smiles along his rounded cheek. Grief hath not dimm'd the brightness of his form, Love and Affection o'er him spread their wings, And Nature, like a nurse, attends him with Her sweetest looks. The humming bee will bound From out the flower, nor sting his baby hand, The birds sing to him from the sunny tree, And suppliantly the fierce-eyed mastiff fawn Beneath his feet, to court the playful touch.