PoemsT. Cadell, and E. Moxon, 1836 |
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Page 174
... , and who would not believe ? ) Reveals itself . Yet cannot I forget Him , who rejoiced me in those walks at eve , * My earliest , pleasantest ; who dwells unseen , * The glow - worm . And in our northern clime , when all is still 174.
... , and who would not believe ? ) Reveals itself . Yet cannot I forget Him , who rejoiced me in those walks at eve , * My earliest , pleasantest ; who dwells unseen , * The glow - worm . And in our northern clime , when all is still 174.
Page 178
... believe , they go for the most part on the same errand ; nor will those who reflect , think that errand an idle one . Almost all men are over - anxious . No sooner do they enter the world , than they lose that taste for natural and ...
... believe , they go for the most part on the same errand ; nor will those who reflect , think that errand an idle one . Almost all men are over - anxious . No sooner do they enter the world , than they lose that taste for natural and ...
Page 207
... believe the tradition there , in honour of a maternal uncle , a grand - master of that Order , whose achieve- ments in PALESTINE she would sometimes relate . A mountain - stream ran through the garden ; and at no great distance , where ...
... believe the tradition there , in honour of a maternal uncle , a grand - master of that Order , whose achieve- ments in PALESTINE she would sometimes relate . A mountain - stream ran through the garden ; and at no great distance , where ...
Page 240
... before the statue was up , that had been voted to his memory , every tax , if we may believe the historian , was laid on as before , to awaken vain regrets and wise resolutions . Turner RA . A FAREWELL . * AND now farewell 240.
... before the statue was up , that had been voted to his memory , every tax , if we may believe the historian , was laid on as before , to awaken vain regrets and wise resolutions . Turner RA . A FAREWELL . * AND now farewell 240.
Page 267
... believe . ' —But tell me truly . How is my good city of Venice ? Flourishing ? ' — ' More than ever .'- ' Then I am under no apprehension . All must go well . ' P. 66 , 1. 17 . ' Who were the Six we supped with Yesternight ? ' An ...
... believe . ' —But tell me truly . How is my good city of Venice ? Flourishing ? ' — ' More than ever .'- ' Then I am under no apprehension . All must go well . ' P. 66 , 1. 17 . ' Who were the Six we supped with Yesternight ? ' An ...
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Common terms and phrases
age to age AMALFI ancient ARIOSTO beautiful Boccaccio BOLOGNA breathed called Catullus church Cimabue City cliff cried cross darkness dead death delight Doge door dream drew dusk till dawn earth ELEONORA DI TOLEDO entered ere long eyes father fear fell fled Florence foot gate gazed GENOA glade glimmering gold Gondolier gone grave grove hadst hand heard heart heaven holy hour Italy La Scala lake length light lived look lost MARCOLINI MONTE CASSINO night noble noblest numbered o'er once Padua palaces passed Petrarch pleasure Pompeii ROME round sacred sail says seen sigh silent sitting sleep song soon splendour stir stood stranger sung temple thee things thou art thou hast thought thousand thro Titian tomb tower traveller turned Twas twelve tables Venetian VENICE verse voice walls wander waves whence wild young youth