Poetic hours; consisting of poems, original and translated; stanzas for music &cLongman, Hurst, Rees, 1825 - 200 pages |
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Page 6
... lady , whom wedlock had bound ; But sad was his dirge , as the moans of the surge , Though the wine - cup and goblet ... lady , so fair and so young : He paused and he wept , ere his strings he swept , For thus their death and their ...
... lady , whom wedlock had bound ; But sad was his dirge , as the moans of the surge , Though the wine - cup and goblet ... lady , so fair and so young : He paused and he wept , ere his strings he swept , For thus their death and their ...
Page 7
... fair lady , and change them away For a vesture as white as those robes of delight , But less fair and less fit for a bride than they . For thy hood , and thy veil , and thy robe shall be pale , But dark is the mantle to thee that's ...
... fair lady , and change them away For a vesture as white as those robes of delight , But less fair and less fit for a bride than they . For thy hood , and thy veil , and thy robe shall be pale , But dark is the mantle to thee that's ...
Page 8
... lady , that wed in thy bridal bed , They meet , but they part no more for ever . Then come to that bed , it is folded and spread , And prepared for the couch of the fair and the brave ; On thy true lover's breast , thou may'st lay thee ...
... lady , that wed in thy bridal bed , They meet , but they part no more for ever . Then come to that bed , it is folded and spread , And prepared for the couch of the fair and the brave ; On thy true lover's breast , thou may'st lay thee ...
Page 25
George Fleming Richardson. WRITTEN IN AN ALBUM . LADY ! when first , with eager eyes , This yet unblemish'd book we see , The thoughtful mind , at once , descries In this fair scroll , the type of thee . For , on the white and virgin ...
George Fleming Richardson. WRITTEN IN AN ALBUM . LADY ! when first , with eager eyes , This yet unblemish'd book we see , The thoughtful mind , at once , descries In this fair scroll , the type of thee . For , on the white and virgin ...
Page 32
... - blown blushes of the rose . Blest vision ! for a moment mine , And must a form so fair depart , No ! ever in its holiest shrine , " Twill reign the idol of the heart ! ON SEEING A LADY SHED TEARS . THE rosebud , 32 Stanzas.
... - blown blushes of the rose . Blest vision ! for a moment mine , And must a form so fair depart , No ! ever in its holiest shrine , " Twill reign the idol of the heart ! ON SEEING A LADY SHED TEARS . THE rosebud , 32 Stanzas.
Other editions - View all
Poetic Hours; Consisting of Poems, Original and Translated; Stanzas for ... George Fleming Richardson No preview available - 2011 |
Poetic Hours: Consisting of Poems, Original and Translated; Stanzas for Music &C George Fleming Richardson No preview available - 2016 |
Poetic Hours: Consisting of Poems, Original and Translated, Stanzas for ... George Richardson No preview available - 2017 |
Common terms and phrases
ALBUM Ave Maria banks of Loire beauteous beauty Beauty's bless blest bliss boon bower brave breathe bride bright brow charms cheek couch Cupid dark dear dirge divine divinest doom dream e'en e'er earth Emma faint fair fair Lady Falernian wine FALL OF BYZANTIUM fav'rite flowers flute Friendship gentlest gloom glow grace grove hallow'd hark haste hath hear heard heart heaven holiest holy hour Hymen hymn joys lady lips lord Lorenzo lov'd Love's lover lute lyre Maecenas meek methought minstrel Muse ne'er night Nymph o'er pale pilgrim prayer PYRRHA roam rose rosy Sabbath-bell sacred Sappho scarce seem'd seraph shades shore shrine sleep smile soar soft song soon sooth sorrows soul spirit STANZAS strains sweet sweetest tear thee thine thou art tomb Twas twilight twine Venus vesper wake weep wine woes would'st yonder young youth
Popular passages
Page 47 - Since once I sat upon a promontory, And heard a mermaid, on a dolphin's back, Uttering such dulcet and harmonious breath. That the rude sea grew civil at her song ; And certain stars shot madly from their spheres, To hear the sea-maid's music.
Page 23 - Men neither could nor would resist 'em ; For Hymen's fires inflamed their breast, And Cupid's arrows seldom missed 'em. But changing thus their arms about, The boys became perplexed and stupid ; Love puts the torch of Hymen out, While Hymen blunts the shafts of Cupid.
Page 96 - Heaven'. how horrible it is to be A prey to the wild waters, to contend, And feel how vain the contest, with the waves, Th...
Page 123 - O ! I would roam around thy turrets, while They bask in moonlight beauty, while Romance Wakes the high visions of her holiest trance, And bids her fairest forms the night beguile.
Page 48 - I would not but hear my mother's voice! I would not but bid her heart rejoice! For all the mines of wealth that sleep In the bottomless caves of the ocean deep!
Page vii - THE following effusions were written, chiefly, at an early age, and under circumstances little favourable to poetical pursuits.
Page 26 - And, ere he sunk beneath the flood, To bless it with a parting smile. So when the Christian's day is past, Tis his to chase the twilight gloom, To glow the brighter at the last, And gild with glory e'en the tomb.
Page 81 - Thy words are daggers—spare them then. Alas! How short is woman's triumph o'er herself. A brief uncertain time she may o'erpass Her sex's limits, for...
Page 10 - Ah, no! that hope I fear is o'er, I bid the dear deceit farewell; And scarce may hope to hear once more The music of the Sabbath-bell.
Page 37 - Who sung so passing sweet, and every eve, From yonder vine-wreathed window, breathed so soft Her vespers to the Virgin...