WORDSWORTH. YES, mighty Poet, we have read thy lines, And felt our hearts the better for the reading. A friendly spirit, from thy soul proceeding, Unites our souls ; the light from thee that shines Like the first break of morn, dissolves, combines All... Poems - Page 17by Hartley Coleridge - 1851Full view - About this book
| Hartley Coleridge - 1851 - 408 pages
...thy soul proceeding, Unites our souls ; the light from thee that shines Like the first break of morn, dissolves, combines All creatures with a living flood...glee, Shall love each other more for loving thee. AND those whose lot may never be to meet Kin souls confined in bodies sever'd far, As if thy Genius... | |
| Literature - 1851 - 658 pages
...thy soul proceeding, Unites our souls ; the light from thee that shines Like the first break of morn, dissolves, combines All creatures with a living flood...in glee, Shall love each other more for loving thee vo THE SAME. And those whose lot may never be to meet Kin souls confined in bodies severed far. As... | |
| William [poetical works Wordsworth (selections]) - 1885 - 300 pages
...ago." Well might Hartley Coleridge declare, when addressing " him who uttered nothing base " — . " Long as man exists, immortal bard, Friends, husbands,...glee, Shall love each other more for loving thee." Wordsworth's quiet life was uneventful. His ancestors were yeomen, or landed gentry, who could he traced... | |
| William Angus Knight, Wordsworth Society - Wordsworth Society - 1889 - 388 pages
...Wordsworthians, and which this Society, we may modestly hope, has done nothing at least to weaken— Oh, what must be Thy glory here, and what the huge...glee, Shall love each other more for loving thee. SPEECH BY AUBREY DE VERE. SPEECH BY AUBREY DE VERE. 1 I DEEM it a great honour that I have been intrusted... | |
| William Angus Knight - 1889 - 394 pages
...Wordsworthians, and which this Society, we may modestly hope, has done nothing at least to weaken — Oh, what must be Thy glory here, and what the huge...or in glee, Shall love each other more for loving thec. SPEECH BY AUBREY DE VERE. SPEECH BY AUBREY DE VERB.i I DEEM it a great' honour that I have been... | |
| Estelle Davenport Adams - English poetry - 1894 - 432 pages
...thy soul proceeding, Unites our souls ; the light from thee that shines Like the first break of morn, dissolves, combines All creatures with a living flood...region of thy poesy? For long as man exists, immortal Rard, Friends, husbands, wives, in sadness or in glee, Shall love each other more for loving thee.... | |
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