The Works in Verse and Prose Complete of Henry Vaughan, Silurist: Secular poetryprivate circulation, 1871 - English literature |
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Page xxxvii
... seen there was a ring of darkness around his Life . His deepest companionships and associates were tinged ( if the word be not too poor ) with sadness : and I have a feeling that to him as others , tears were more potential things than ...
... seen there was a ring of darkness around his Life . His deepest companionships and associates were tinged ( if the word be not too poor ) with sadness : and I have a feeling that to him as others , tears were more potential things than ...
Page lvi
... seen I now can see no more . The Rainbow comes and goes , And lovely is the Rose , The Moon doth with delight Look round her when the heavens are bare , Waters on a starry night Are beautiful and fair ; 1 Vol . I. pp . 254-5 . The ...
... seen I now can see no more . The Rainbow comes and goes , And lovely is the Rose , The Moon doth with delight Look round her when the heavens are bare , Waters on a starry night Are beautiful and fair ; 1 Vol . I. pp . 254-5 . The ...
Page lxiii
... seen this poem when he wrote his . The coincidences are so remarkable that it is certainly difficult to esteem them accidental ; but Wordsworth was so little a reader of anything out of the way , and at the time when his Ode was ...
... seen this poem when he wrote his . The coincidences are so remarkable that it is certainly difficult to esteem them accidental ; but Wordsworth was so little a reader of anything out of the way , and at the time when his Ode was ...
Page lxx
... seen " the other night . " - Eternity SEEN and Time ! It were not difficult to turn to kindredly grand word - embodiments of an unique subjective- ness that found within itself the materials for more lustrous ladder of light by which to ...
... seen " the other night . " - Eternity SEEN and Time ! It were not difficult to turn to kindredly grand word - embodiments of an unique subjective- ness that found within itself the materials for more lustrous ladder of light by which to ...
Page lxxv
... seen by the sense of sight merely , but what the Mind guides or uses the eye , now as telescope and now as microscope , to see . It is astounding and humiliating how large is the majority of men and women who see and yet don't see how ...
... seen by the sense of sight merely , but what the Mind guides or uses the eye , now as telescope and now as microscope , to see . It is astounding and humiliating how large is the majority of men and women who see and yet don't see how ...
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Amoret beams Ben Jonson bloud breath bright clouds dark dayes dead death dost doth dust e're Earth Essay ETESIA Eugenius Philalethes ev'ry eyes face fair fame fate fear fire flames flowers forc'd give glory griefe grone hæc hath heart heav'n HENRY VAUGHAN Herbert honour I'le Ibid Inglorius is't king leaves light live look Lord LYSIMACHUS MATTHEW HERBERT METRUM mind Misprinted Mount of Olives Muse Nature never night numbers o're Olor Iscanus poem poet Poetry quæ quam Reader rich RIVER USK Satire vi Sejanus shades shew shine Silex Silex Scintillans Silurist skie smiles sorrow soul spirit Spring stars streams sweet tears Thalia Rediviva thee thine things THOMAS VAUGHAN thou art thought tibi title-page Twas unto verse vex'd weep WEST DEREHAM wind wings Wordsworth