| Albert Stanburrough Cook, Chauncey Brewster Tinker - Anglo-Saxon poetry - 1902 - 234 pages
...be stranger to those joys, And wander wretched when he goes from hence." 890 5. ST. ANDREW'S MIRACLE Then was there no delay ; straightway the stone Split...their lives And seek a refuge in the mountain caves, 1540 Firm earth's support. An angel drove them back, Compassing all the town with gleaming fire, With... | |
| Electronic journals - 1925 - 596 pages
...flood; the youths were doomed, And perished in the deep; the rush of war Snatched them away with terror of the sea. That was a grievous trouble, bitter beer;...From daybreak on, each man had drink to spare. The word here translated "beer" is, in the original, rather a " receiving or taking of beer," and hence,... | |
| Electronic journals - 1925 - 628 pages
...flood; the youths were doomed, And perished in the deep; the rush of war Snatched them away with terror of the sea. That was a grievous trouble, bitter beer;...From daybreak on, each man had drink to spare. The word here translated " beer " is, in the original, rather a " receiving or taking of beer," and hence,... | |
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