| 1910 - 862 pages
...and lte described them with a truth that shines more brightly to-day thau then: — Men, loud against all forms of power — Unfurnished brows, tempestuous...things in an hour — Brass mouths and iron lungs. Above аll Tennysou was a good patriot. He condemned "peace at any price" with an eloquence that has... | |
| Literary and Philosophical Society of Liverpool - 1898 - 248 pages
...above all, the tyranny of the mob, when led by Communists, whom he describes as — Men loud against all forms of power Unfurnished brows, tempestuous...all things in an hour, Brass mouths, and iron lungs. He repeatedly warns us against the dangers of an armed revolutionary populace who would indeed leave... | |
| 1886 - 910 pages
...better described than in the words of Tennyson : — "Men loud against all forms of power, Unfurnish'd brows, tempestuous tongues, Expecting all things in an hour, Brass mouths and iron lungs l " However wild and foolish and impolitic the demands of saloon-made socialism may be, nevertheless,... | |
| Marlborough coll - 1885 - 514 pages
...Where Freedom broadens slowly down From precedent to precedent, with the banality of Men loud against all forms of power — Unfurnished brows, tempestuous...Expecting all things in an hour — Brass mouths and iron Inngs. in reading which we pause to consider of how many" vulgarisms the most forcible phrase in it... | |
| 1886 - 532 pages
...events is too obvious to be unintentional — ' Men loud against all forms of power — Unfurnish'd brows, tempestuous tongues — Expecting all things in an hour — Brass mouths and iron lungs.' The book is a wonderful production for a man of his or of any age ; all the more so, that the whole... | |
| Alfred Tennyson Baron Tennyson - 1885 - 220 pages
...would raise a wind To sing thee to thy grave, x. Men loud against all forms of power— Unfurnish'd brows, tempestuous tongues— Expecting all things in an hour— Brass mouths and iron lungs ! TO HRH PRINCESS BEATRICE. Two Suns of Love make day of human life, Which else with all its pains,... | |
| Ovid - 1885 - 216 pages
...Tennyson, in Macmillan's Mag., Dec. 1884, p. 83, 'Men loud against all forms of power — Unfurnish'd brows, tempestuous tongues — Expecting all things in an hour — Brass mouths and iron lungs' infragilis is Homer's appixTos, Vergil's ' ferrea.' pectna = ' lungs.' For the omission of the substantive... | |
| Alfred Tennyson Baron Tennyson - 1885 - 546 pages
...To sing thee to thy grave, Men loud against all forms of power — Unfurnish'd brows, tempestuous f tongues — ** Expecting all things in an hour — Brass mouths and iron lungs ! TO HRH PRINCESS BEATRICE. Two Suns of Love make day of human life, Which else with all its pains,... | |
| Ovid - 1885 - 204 pages
...Tennyson, in Macmillan's Mag., Dec. 1884, p. 83, 'Men loud against all forms of power — Unfurnish'd brows, tempestuous tongues — Expecting all things in an hour — Brass mouths and inn lungs' infragilis is Homer's appijvror, Vergil's ' ferrea.' pectus = ' lungs.' For the omission... | |
| 1886 - 892 pages
...strown the wave, Though some of late would raise a wind To sing thce to thy grave. Men loud against all forms of power — Unfurnished brows, tempestuous...things in an hour — Brass mouths and iron lungs." These are strong words, and some of them cannot be applied to Mr. William Morris. But he appears to... | |
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