The Works of Professor Wilson of the University of Edinburgh: Poetical worksW. Blackwood, 1858 |
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... HEARD OF THE DEATH OF MY FRIEND WILLIAM DUNLOP , 409 THE LAKE LAY HID , 409 LINES SACRED TO THE MEMORY OF THE REV . JAMES GRAHAME , AUTHOR OF " THE SABBATH , " ETC. , 410 TROUTBECK CHAPEL , 419 * A CHURCHYARD DREAM , 422 * THE MAGIC ...
... HEARD OF THE DEATH OF MY FRIEND WILLIAM DUNLOP , 409 THE LAKE LAY HID , 409 LINES SACRED TO THE MEMORY OF THE REV . JAMES GRAHAME , AUTHOR OF " THE SABBATH , " ETC. , 410 TROUTBECK CHAPEL , 419 * A CHURCHYARD DREAM , 422 * THE MAGIC ...
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... heard , Like that of dreamer murmuring in his sleep ; ' Tis partly the billow , and partly the air That lies like a garment floating fair Above the happy deep . The sea , I ween , cannot be fanned By evening freshness from the land ...
... heard , Like that of dreamer murmuring in his sleep ; ' Tis partly the billow , and partly the air That lies like a garment floating fair Above the happy deep . The sea , I ween , cannot be fanned By evening freshness from the land ...
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... heard , In lake and tarn oft nightly stirred The Maiden's ghost - like shade . But she hath bidden a last farewell To lake and mountain , stream and dell , And fresh have blown the gales For many a mournful night and day , Wafting the ...
... heard , In lake and tarn oft nightly stirred The Maiden's ghost - like shade . But she hath bidden a last farewell To lake and mountain , stream and dell , And fresh have blown the gales For many a mournful night and day , Wafting the ...
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... heard , The coldest blood is warmly stirred , As at some glorious tale . The loftiest spirit never saw This Youth without a sudden awe ; But vain the transient feeling strove Against the stealing power of love . Soon as they felt the ...
... heard , The coldest blood is warmly stirred , As at some glorious tale . The loftiest spirit never saw This Youth without a sudden awe ; But vain the transient feeling strove Against the stealing power of love . Soon as they felt the ...
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... heard , Such as the midnight silence stirred When the wished - for breezes blew , And , instant as the loud commands , Sent upwards from a hundred hands The broad sails rose unto the sky , And from her slumbers suddenly The Ship like ...
... heard , Such as the midnight silence stirred When the wished - for breezes blew , And , instant as the loud commands , Sent upwards from a hundred hands The broad sails rose unto the sky , And from her slumbers suddenly The Ship like ...
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Common terms and phrases
amid art thou Astrologer beauteous beauty behold beneath Blackwood's Magazine blessed blest bliss bosom breast breath bright calm cheek cheer child clouds dark dead death deep delight doth dreadful dream e'er earth eyes face fair fairy Fairy-Queen fear feel flowers Frank Frankfort gaze gentle gleam glen glide grave grief happy hath hear heart heaven heavenly holy hour hush hymn innocence Isabel Isle Isle of Palms kiss light living lonely look Magd Magdalene Master of Revels mirth morn mortal Morven mother mountains mournful murmuring NAIAD Nature's ne'er night o'er Octavo pale peace Plague prayer Priest rills round sail seems sighs silent sing sleep smile soft solitude song sorrow soul sound spirit stars sunny sweet tears thee thine thou art thought Twas Unimore unto voice walk Walsingham waves ween weep wild wretch
Popular passages
Page 407 - A CLOUD lay cradled near the setting sun ; A gleam of crimson tinged its braided snow : Long had I watched the glory moving on, O'er the still radiance of the lake below ; Tranquil its spirit seemed, and floated slow, E'en in its very motion there was rest ; While every breath of eve that chanced to blow, Wafted the traveller to the beauteous west.
Page 16 - Now is the ocean's bosom bare, Unbroken as the floating air ; The ship hath melted quite away, Like a struggling dream at break of day. No image meets my wandering eye, But the new-risen sun and the sunny sky.
Page 124 - This frame of dust, this feeble breath, The Plague may soon destroy ; We think on Thee, and feel in death A deep and awful joy. Dim is the light of vanished years In the glory yet to come ; O idle grief ! O foolish tears ! When Jesus calls us home. Like children for some bauble fair That weep themselves to rest ; We part with life — awake ! and there The jewel in our breast ! SCENE III.
Page 228 - Wafting up his own mountains that far-beaming head ; Or borne like a whirlwind down on the vale ? — Hail ! King of the wild and the beautiful ! — hail ! Hail ! Idol divine ! — whom Nature hath borne O'er a hundred hill-tops since the mists of the morn, Whom the pilgrim lone wandering on mountain and moor, As the vision glides by...
Page 226 - But when a stranger meets thy view, Glistens thine eye with wilder hue. A moment's thought who I may be, Blends with thy smiles of courtesy. Fair was that face as break of dawn, When o'er its beauty sleep was drawn Like a thin veil that half-concealed The light of soul, and half-revealed.
Page 228 - O'er the black silent forest piled lofty and lone — A throne which the eagle is glad to resign Unto footsteps so fleet and so fearless as thine. There the bright heather springs up in love of thy breast...
Page 401 - To whom belongs this valley fair, That sleeps beneath the filmy air, Even like a living thing ? Silent, — as infant at the breast, — Save a still sound that speaks of rest, That streamlet's murmuring ! The heavens appear to love this vale ; Here clouds with scarce-seen motion sail, Or 'mid the silence lie. By that blue arch, this beauteous earth Mid evening's hour of dewy mirth Seems bound unto the sky.
Page 31 - Oft as sea-breezes blow. The sun and clouds alone possess The joy of all that loveliness ; And sweetly to each other smile The live-long day — sun, cloud, and isle.