Poems and Songs, Principally Relating to Scottish Manners and CustomsP. Livingston, 1847 - 158 strán (strany) |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 16.
Strana 9
... heard the ploughman whistling shrill , The milk - maid's song has ceased , the hunter's horn Is silent and hung bye - all hail to Sabbath morn ! B II . Soon as the bright sun beams across the POEMS Sabbath in a Scottish Cottage,
... heard the ploughman whistling shrill , The milk - maid's song has ceased , the hunter's horn Is silent and hung bye - all hail to Sabbath morn ! B II . Soon as the bright sun beams across the POEMS Sabbath in a Scottish Cottage,
Strana 12
... heard to cry , My God ! my God ! and then he closed his eyes In death . The Temple's veil in twain is riven ; The sun is darkened : Lo ! the dead arise ; Huge rocks are rent - men to despair are driven— And earth , affrighted , shakes ...
... heard to cry , My God ! my God ! and then he closed his eyes In death . The Temple's veil in twain is riven ; The sun is darkened : Lo ! the dead arise ; Huge rocks are rent - men to despair are driven— And earth , affrighted , shakes ...
Strana 13
... pleasure for them day by day , And wearies not , but still he labours on , And ne'er an angry word is heard to say- He's ready for the kirk — his heart is glad and gay . X. They reach the lone sequester'd house of God , POEMS AND SONGS .
... pleasure for them day by day , And wearies not , but still he labours on , And ne'er an angry word is heard to say- He's ready for the kirk — his heart is glad and gay . X. They reach the lone sequester'd house of God , POEMS AND SONGS .
Strana 22
... heard to wail or weep . Here they're laid to rest : Nae marbles tell The toils on earth they shared ! But their griefs and woes are ended 1 In the auld kirk - yard . * * Mr. ROBERT CHAMBERS , in a beautiful essay , speaks thus of the ...
... heard to wail or weep . Here they're laid to rest : Nae marbles tell The toils on earth they shared ! But their griefs and woes are ended 1 In the auld kirk - yard . * * Mr. ROBERT CHAMBERS , in a beautiful essay , speaks thus of the ...
Strana 25
... heard the loud winds blaw , An ' wished the houseless wanderer wi's , Around my Father's Ha ' . IV . Oh ! it's there that I first learned To read guid an ' holy books- It's there that I first saw wi ' joy A mither's anxious looks- It's ...
... heard the loud winds blaw , An ' wished the houseless wanderer wi's , Around my Father's Ha ' . IV . Oh ! it's there that I first learned To read guid an ' holy books- It's there that I first saw wi ' joy A mither's anxious looks- It's ...
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ae night aften Anna auld kirk-yard awfu baith barley bree Beneath the trystin blaw blessed thing blest blooming heather Bonnie Dundee BONNIE LASS bosom burn canna cauld chiel cottage cottar creels cried D'ye mind dear Dearest deary dinna Dundee e'en earth fair Father's fear frae friends gang awa gi'e grave guid Hail hail the Queen happy heard heart heaven herding o't hills humble ilka John JOHN BETHUNE kiddies kind laddie lassie lo'ed look lovely Annie mair mang maun mither mony morn mourn ne'er never o'er peace poems Queen Victoria sang skies smiled snaw songs soon sorrow tears tell thee There's thou thundering cannon time's tree true TRYSTING TREE VIII wander weary weel ween Whar wind yonder bower young
Populárne pasáže
Strana 3 - And wi' the lave ilk merry morn Could rank my rig and lass, Still shearing, and clearing The tither stocked raw, Wi' claivers, an haivers, Wearing the day awa : Ev'n then a wish, (I mind its power,) A wish that to my latest hour Shall strongly heave my breast; That I for poor auld Scotland's sake, Some usefu' plan, or beuk could make, Or sing a sang at least.
Strana 9 - From scenes like these old Scotia's grandeur springs, That makes her loved at home, revered abroad : Princes and lords are but the breath of kings; " An honest man's the noblest work of God ;" And, certes,* in fair virtue's heavenly road, The cottage leaves the palace far behind.
Strana 49 - Why was an independent wish E'er planted in my mind ? If not, why am I subject to His cruelty or scorn ? Or why has man the will and power To make his fellow mourn...
Strana 20 - Tis but a night, a long and moonless night ; We make the grave our bed, and then are gone.
Strana 59 - I did not think there was so much beauty in a locality so little talked of. Around me lay the hills reposing in quiet grandeur, and before me lay the "Loch of Lindores, which in the calm twilight of a summer's evening appears like the eye of nature looking up to its Maker in the spirit of meek and quiet devotion.
Strana 53 - STIR the beal-fire, wave the banner, Bid the thundering cannon sound, Rend the skies with acclamation, Stun the woods and waters round, Till the echoes of our gathering Turn the world's admiring gaze To this act of duteous homage Scotland to her Poet pays. Fill the banks and braes with music, Be it loud and low by turns — That we owe the deathless glory, This the hapless fate of Burns.
Strana 142 - An' those that used to meet us there We'll think on many a year. Iv. Now let us hope our years may be As guid as they ha'e been : Let's hope we ne'er again will see The sorrows we hae seen ; An
Strana 141 - We ran about the burnie's side, The spot will aye be dear ; An' those that used to meet us there We'll think on many a year.