Voices from the Mountains and from the Crowd |
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Page 4
... heart brimful of hope for human kind , Spake to his friends ; and him , with voice of cheer , Answer'd the rhymer : ' Half one toilsome year I've moiled in cities , and , like thee , I long To see the placid lochs , the torrents strong ...
... heart brimful of hope for human kind , Spake to his friends ; and him , with voice of cheer , Answer'd the rhymer : ' Half one toilsome year I've moiled in cities , and , like thee , I long To see the placid lochs , the torrents strong ...
Page 5
... heart , A sculptor , born to elevate his art , And loving it with fervor , such as burned In old Pygmalion's spirit , when he yearned For the sweet image that his hands had made , Shouted consent . ' But whither bound ? ' he said ...
... heart , A sculptor , born to elevate his art , And loving it with fervor , such as burned In old Pygmalion's spirit , when he yearned For the sweet image that his hands had made , Shouted consent . ' But whither bound ? ' he said ...
Page 10
... heart with pity , and the eyes With tears , at bare remembrance ; and old songs Of love's endurance , love's despair , love's wrongs And triumph o'er all obstacles at last ; And all the grief and passion of the past . Invoking these to ...
... heart with pity , and the eyes With tears , at bare remembrance ; and old songs Of love's endurance , love's despair , love's wrongs And triumph o'er all obstacles at last ; And all the grief and passion of the past . Invoking these to ...
Page 12
... heart- That ere returning to the world again That little month might make them better men . And what they talked of , what they dreamed or sung , What tales they told , or beads of fancy strung , What aspirations of a better time , They ...
... heart- That ere returning to the world again That little month might make them better men . And what they talked of , what they dreamed or sung , What tales they told , or beads of fancy strung , What aspirations of a better time , They ...
Page 16
... heart , Lest , in my haste , I mar delight , And thou shouldst die and end thy pain Too suddenly before my sight . Not yet thy venomous blood shall flow , But I will slay thee ere I go ! ' Her body - guards , so fierce and grim , Seized ...
... heart , Lest , in my haste , I mar delight , And thou shouldst die and end thy pain Too suddenly before my sight . Not yet thy venomous blood shall flow , But I will slay thee ere I go ! ' Her body - guards , so fierce and grim , Seized ...
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Common terms and phrases
amid bath beauty behold beneath bless breast breath calm cheeks clear Cleon crime crowd curse Danton dark DEAD SEA delight DIONYSIA divine dream dull earth Ellen Evelina Eternity evermore eyes face fair fancies fearful filled float flow flowers GIRONDINS give glory grey owl grief Guizot hand hanging groves happy hate hear heart heaven heavenly hope hour King land light limbs live Lochlin look lord LOUIS PHILIPPE mar delight mighty mind misery morning mountain never night o'er Old opinions pass Place de Grève poor Pyrenees ringdove scorn shine sigh sight SILLERY sing smile song sorrow soul stars strong sunshine sweet tears tell thee There's thine things thou art thou hast thought toil trees truth Twas VERGNIAUD voice wave winds wine wise words world goes round wrong young youth
Popular passages
Page 194 - Aid the dawning, tongue and pen ; Aid it, hopes of honest men; Aid it, paper — aid it, type — Aid it, for the hour is ripe, And our earnest must not slacken Into play. Men of thought and men of action, Clear the way ! to!
Page 198 - Wait a little longer. There's a good time coming, boys, A good time coming : The people shall be temperate, And shall love instead of hate,"!
Page 160 - A nameless man, amid a crowd That throng'd the daily mart, Let fall a word of Hope and Love, Unstudied, from the heart ; A whisper on the tumult thrown — A transitory breath — It raised a brother from the dust, It saved a soul from death. O germ ! O fount ! O word of love ! O thought at random cast ! Ye were but little at the first, But mighty at the last ! CHARLES MACKAY.
Page 218 - Freshening vigor I ; He in velvet, I in fustian, Richer man am I. Cleon is a slave to grandeur, Free as thought am I ; Cleon fees a score of doctors, Need of none have I : Wealth-surrounded, care-environed, Cleon fears to die ; Death may come, he 'll find me ready, Happier man am I.
Page 197 - There's a good time coming, boys, A good time coming : Hateful rivalries of creed Shall not make their martyrs bleed In the good time coming. Religion shall be shorn of pride, And flourish all the stronger ; ' And charity shall trim her lamp ; Wait a little longer. There's a good time coming...
Page 195 - sa midnight blackness changing Into gray. Men of thought and men of action, Clear the way ! 19 Once the welcome light has broken, Who shall say What the unimagined glories Of the day ? What the evil that shall perish In its ray ? Aid the dawning, tongue and pen ; Aid it, hopes of honest men ; Aid it paper, — aid it type, — • Aid it, for the hour is ripe, And our earnest must not slacken Into play. Men of thought and men of action, Clear the way...
Page 224 - Blessings on Science, and her handmaid Steam ! They make Utopia only half a dream ; And show the fervent, of capacious souls, Who watch the ball of Progress as it rolls, That all as yet completed, or begun, Is but the dawning that precedes the sun.
Page 196 - THE GOOD TIME COMING. THERE'S a good time coming, boys, A good time coming: We may not live to see the day, But earth shall glisten in the ray Of the good time coming. Cannon-balls may aid the truth, But thought's a weapon stronger; We'll win our battle by its aid; — Wait a little longer. There's a good time coming, boys, A good time coming: The pen shall supersede the sword, And Right, not Might, shall be the lord In the good time coming.
Page 213 - They were days when the gallows stood black in the way The larger the town, the more plentiful they ; When Law never dreamed it was good to relent, Or thought it less wisdom to kill than prevent ; When Justice herself, taking Law for her guide, Was never appeased till a victim had died ; And the stealer of sheep, and the slayer of men, Were strung up together — again and again.
Page 206 - No dread of toil have we or ours ; We know our worth, and weigh our powers ; The more we work the more we win : Success to Trade...