Contemplation: With Other PoemsWilliam Watson, 1820 - 340 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 44
Page 4
... spring , Blithe I joined the sportive ring : When the evening sun serene , Wooed me to the village green ; Softly stole the passing hour ; Sweetly breathed each blossomed flower ; Brighter glowed the western sky ; Gladness beamed in ...
... spring , Blithe I joined the sportive ring : When the evening sun serene , Wooed me to the village green ; Softly stole the passing hour ; Sweetly breathed each blossomed flower ; Brighter glowed the western sky ; Gladness beamed in ...
Page 14
... spring ; Plovers , wailing , sad and shrill ; Cattle , lowing from the hill ; While the cushat , plaining deep , Bids the woodland echoes weep ; Longing for the lazy morn , Blackbirds strip the berried thorn ; While the helpless , timid ...
... spring ; Plovers , wailing , sad and shrill ; Cattle , lowing from the hill ; While the cushat , plaining deep , Bids the woodland echoes weep ; Longing for the lazy morn , Blackbirds strip the berried thorn ; While the helpless , timid ...
Page 28
... springs , On the sea - beat rock she sings ; Sporting on the wanton waves , There her snowy bosom laves ; Smiles in Beauty's softest charms , Lures the sailor to her arms ! Bears him to a shelly bed , Pillows there his lifeless head ...
... springs , On the sea - beat rock she sings ; Sporting on the wanton waves , There her snowy bosom laves ; Smiles in Beauty's softest charms , Lures the sailor to her arms ! Bears him to a shelly bed , Pillows there his lifeless head ...
Page 30
... springs . When the dread tornado's force Sweeps its desolating course , Ruin with exulting smiles , Scattering death on Indian isles ; When the trembling turrets shake , Valleys groan , and mountains quake ; Waters from their channel ...
... springs . When the dread tornado's force Sweeps its desolating course , Ruin with exulting smiles , Scattering death on Indian isles ; When the trembling turrets shake , Valleys groan , and mountains quake ; Waters from their channel ...
Page 39
... spring : Where the plane - tree's branches wave , Soon she slumbered in the grave . Those who followed , fawned , and sighed , When she smiled in Beauty's pride , Now , with careless steps , can tread The grassy turf that wraps her head ...
... spring : Where the plane - tree's branches wave , Soon she slumbered in the grave . Those who followed , fawned , and sighed , When she smiled in Beauty's pride , Now , with careless steps , can tread The grassy turf that wraps her head ...
Common terms and phrases
alang amidst Anna's Arbroath artless baith beam Beauty Beauty's beguile beneath blest bliss bloom blossom blush bonny Lass bosom bower breast breath bright cauld charms cheek cheerful cudna dark dear delight dewy dream Duke of Albany Dunkeld echoes fair fairy bower Fancy Fancy's flower fondly frae fragrance gentle glide gloom glow grace green grief grove hail hallowed hapless haply heart hour hovering ilka life's light lingering LOMOND HILL lonely Love Love's lyre maid mair Mary morn mourn Muse Muse's ne'er night o'er pensive plain pride rapture Rothsay round scorn seraph shade shed shine sigh silent skies sleep slumbers smatchets smile soft song soothe sorrow soul spread storm strain summer sweet swell tale tear tempest thee thine thou tomb trembling triumph Twas vale virgin Spring wander Watty wave whisper wild William the Lion winds wing woes youthful
Popular passages
Page 2 - There is a pleasure in the pathless woods, There is a rapture on the lonely shore. There is society where none intrudes, By the deep sea, and music in its roar; I love not man the less, but nature more...
Page 335 - ... no person in whom she could confide, was admitted into her presence ; even the ambassadors of the French King and Queen of England were refused access to her. In this solitary state, without a counsellor or a friend, under the pressure of distress, and the apprehension of danger, it was natural for a woman to hearken almost to any overtures. The confederates took advantage of her condition, and of her fears. They employed Lord Lindsay, the fiercest zealot in the party, to communicate their scheme...
Page 152 - scape from chill misfortune's gloom, From helpless age and joyless years ; To sleep where flowerets round us bloom ; — Can such a fate deserve our tears ? Since, in the tomb, our cares, our woes, In dark oblivion buried lie, Why paint that scene of calm repose In figures painful to the eye ? To...
Page 309 - Tis sweet to scent the primrose springin' ; Or through the woodlands green to stray, In ilka buss the mavis singin' : But sweeter than the woodlands green, Or primrose painted fair by Nature, Is she wha smiles, a rural queen, The bonny lass o...
Page 336 - July 21. him all the powers and privileges of that high office. By a third she substituted some other nobleman in Murray's place, if he should refuse the honour which was designed for him. Mary, when she subscribed these deeds, was bathed in tears; and while she gave away, as it were with her own hands, the sceptre which she had swayed so long, she fell a pang of grief and indignation, one of the severest, perhaps, which can touch the human heart3.
Page 153 - And, when anew that flame shall burn, Perhaps the dust that lies enshrined, May rise, a woodbine, o'er my urn, With verdant tendrils round it twined. How would the gentle bosom beat, That sighs at death's resistless power, A faithful friend again to meet Fresh blooming in a fragrant flower ! The love, that in my bosom glows, Will live, when I shall long be dead, And, haply, tinge some budding rose That blushes o'er my grassy bed. O, thou who hast so long been dear, When I shall cease to smile on...
Page 310 - There's love an' truth in ilka feature ; For her I'm past baith wark an
Page 113 - Seek not, amidst his wreath to twine One verse that he himself suppressed ; His offerings made at folly's shrine, Let them in dark oblivion rest! "Ye wanderers in the wilds of song, On whom I have not smiled in vain, Would you the blissful hours prolong, 0 shun seductive Pleasure's train!
Page 114 - Tis there the Muse unfolds her charms ; From thence her sons should never stray ; Ye souls whom boundless Fancy warms, Still keep this calm sequestered way ; ' So may such never-dying praise, As echoes o'er my darling's tomb, Congenial bloom, amidst your bays, And Heaven bestow a happier doom !' She ceased her song of sorrow deep, Her warbling Harp was heard no more I waked — and wished again to sleep — But ah ! the pleasing dream was o'er ! The rustic Muse, untaught to sing, Has marred the Vision's...