| Weldon Thornton - 1968 - 568 pages
...three stanzas, I quote that entire stanza: " 'T is the last rose of summer/ Left blooming alone;/ All her lovely companions/ Are faded and gone;/ No flower...reflect back her blushes,/ Or give sigh for sigh." The song is alluded to again on p. 257.15/253.15. 256.38/252.38 LISZT'S RHAPSODIES Hungarian composer... | |
| Zack R. Bowen - 1974 - 394 pages
...blooming alone; All her lovely companions Are faded and gone; No flow'r of her kindred, No rose bud is nigh, To reflect back her blushes Or give sigh for sigh. The song serves the function at this late point in the chapter of reemphasizing the plight of Bloom,... | |
| Edgar Allan Poe, Gary Richard Thompson - 1984 - 1572 pages
...never again For her soul gives me sigh for sigh. In Tom Moore's "Last Rose of Summer" we find it thus, hath bin. By which we note the fairies Were of the old profession, Their songs were Ave Marys, T The author of the lines which follow I cannot name just now, but I give them because there are doubtless... | |
| Don Gifford, Robert J. Seidman - 1988 - 704 pages
...extensively in Flotow's Martha. First verse: " Tis the last rose of summer / Left blooming alone; / All her lovely companions / Are faded and gone. / No flower...reflect back her blushes, / Or give sigh for sigh." 11.33 (256:35). Listen! - Miss Douce holds a seashell to George Lidwell's ear (11.923-25 [281:4-6]).... | |
| James Joyce - 1998 - 1060 pages
...Flotow's Martha (see 113.33^); first verse: ' Tis the last rose of summer | Left blooming alone; | All her lovely companions | Are faded and gone; | No flower...No rosebud is nigh, | To reflect back her blushes, | To give sigh for sigh'. 276.14-1 5 Her hand . . . world: echoes William Ross Wallace's (c 1819-81)... | |
| Matthew J. B. Campbell, Jacqueline M. Labbe, Sally Shuttleworth - 2000 - 266 pages
...faded and gone; No flower of its kindred, no rosebud is nigh, To reflect back its blushes, or heave sigh for sigh. I'll not leave thee, thou lone one,...kindly I scatter thy leaves o'er the bed, Where thy mates of the garden lye senseless and dead. So soon may I follow when friendships decay And from love's... | |
| Edgar Allan Poe, Thomas Ollive Mabbott, Eleanor D. Kewer - 2000 - 768 pages
...again For her soul gives me sigh for sigh.1* In Tom Moore's "Last Rose of Summer" we find it thus, No flower of her kindred, No rose-bud is nigh, To reflect back her blushes Or give sigh for sigh. The author of the lines which follow I cannot name just now, but I give them because there are doubtless... | |
| Edgar Allan Poe - 2000 - 678 pages
...Reviewer Reviewed," Poe about 1849 pointed out the parallel in Thomas Moore's "Last Rose of Summer": No flower of her kindred, No rosebud is nigh, To reflect back her blushes And give sigh for sigh. 19 Astartc is the Phoenician goddess sometimes identified with the moon and... | |
| Thomas Moore, Daniel Maclise - 2000 - 290 pages
...lovely eompanious Are faded and gone ; No flower of her kindred;, No rose-bnd is nigh, To refleet haek her blushes, Or give sigh for sigh . I'll not leave thee, thou lone one I To pine on the stem; Sinee the lovely are sleeping, Go, sleep thou with them. Thus kindly I seatter... | |
| W. H. Auden - 2004 - 604 pages
...WS LANDOR. J79 The last Rose of Summer '' I MS the last rose of summer left blooming alone, JL All her lovely companions are faded and gone. No flower...kindly I scatter thy leaves o'er the bed Where thy mates of the garden lie scentless and dead. So soon may I follow when friendships decay, And from love's... | |
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