The English Landscape in Picture, Prose and PoetryKathleen Conyngham Greene |
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Page 61
... roots push and project through the wall of chalk , and bend downwards , sometimes dislodging lumps of rubble to roll headlong among the bushes below . A few small firs cling half - way up and a tangled , matted mass of briar and bramble ...
... roots push and project through the wall of chalk , and bend downwards , sometimes dislodging lumps of rubble to roll headlong among the bushes below . A few small firs cling half - way up and a tangled , matted mass of briar and bramble ...
Page 77
... roots but try Within these deeps to lie , Not her long reaching stalk could ever hold Her waxen head so high . Sometimes an angler comes , and drops his hook Within its hidden depths , and ' gainst a tree Leaning his rod , reads in some ...
... roots but try Within these deeps to lie , Not her long reaching stalk could ever hold Her waxen head so high . Sometimes an angler comes , and drops his hook Within its hidden depths , and ' gainst a tree Leaning his rod , reads in some ...
Page 110
... roots of a giant oak or beech , and enjoy the vernal warmth , while outside of your shelter the wind blows bleak and loud . To lie or sit thus for an hour at a time listening to the wind is an experience worth going far to seek W. H. ...
... roots of a giant oak or beech , and enjoy the vernal warmth , while outside of your shelter the wind blows bleak and loud . To lie or sit thus for an hour at a time listening to the wind is an experience worth going far to seek W. H. ...
Other editions - View all
The English Landscape in Picture, Prose and Poetry Greene, Kathleen Conyngham No preview available - 1932 |
Common terms and phrases
Alice Meynell AUTHOR'S EXECUTORS beautiful beech beneath birch birds bloom blossom blue boughs bower breeze bright Burfield Dyer C. H. Brading Charlotte Mew Childerditch clouds COTTAGE dance dark delightful distant Dorothy Wordsworth doth elms ENGLISH LANDSCAPE EXECUTORS and MESSRS extract eyes farm fields flocks flowers forest FRANCIS BRETT YOUNG G. W. Norris golden grass green grey happy hawthorn heart heaven hedge Huntingdon James Elroy Flecker John Masefield land leaf leaves light look lovely Maud Shelley meadows morn murmur night o'er P. G. Read pines poem pool poplars R. D. Blackmore rain Richard Jefferies road Robert Bridges rock round Sackville-West sail scrap of garden shade sheep shepherd sing sleep soft spire spring stream summer sweet Thames thee Thomas Hardy thou twitter vale valley village violets W. B. Wilson W. H. Hudson weather wild William Cobbett winter woods Young Beichan