The Knickerbocker: Or, New-York Monthly Magazine, Volume 34Charles Fenno Hoffman, Timothy Flint, Lewis Gaylord Clark, Kinahan Cornwallis, John Holmes Agnew 1849 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 83
Page 21
... thou , the meek , hast come . How hast thou borne in all thy gentleness The clouds and rain that frowned upon thy birth , And yet , unwithered , kept thy power to bless The weary ones of earth ? Who loves thee not ? The sturdy son of ...
... thou , the meek , hast come . How hast thou borne in all thy gentleness The clouds and rain that frowned upon thy birth , And yet , unwithered , kept thy power to bless The weary ones of earth ? Who loves thee not ? The sturdy son of ...
Page 22
... Thou , first fond love ! dost bloom . Thy petals may be wet with bitter tears , Thy leaves be ruffled with the saddest sighs , And still thy blossom timidly up - rears Beneath the darkest skies . And from that blossom in the starless ...
... Thou , first fond love ! dost bloom . Thy petals may be wet with bitter tears , Thy leaves be ruffled with the saddest sighs , And still thy blossom timidly up - rears Beneath the darkest skies . And from that blossom in the starless ...
Page 26
... thou shalt see the hoary head No longer is revered . A few more passing bells shall chime , Then life will cease its fitful sweep ; For solemnly the wings of Time Are humming him to sleep . Cambridge , June , 1849 . J. A. S. A DEBATE ON ...
... thou shalt see the hoary head No longer is revered . A few more passing bells shall chime , Then life will cease its fitful sweep ; For solemnly the wings of Time Are humming him to sleep . Cambridge , June , 1849 . J. A. S. A DEBATE ON ...
Page 36
... thou sitt'st apart Thy children's faces gleaming from the wall ; ' The hour of saddening memory's control ; Would my heart's whispers then could gently fall Like softest music on thy yearning soul ! We ne'er may meet , for myriad ...
... thou sitt'st apart Thy children's faces gleaming from the wall ; ' The hour of saddening memory's control ; Would my heart's whispers then could gently fall Like softest music on thy yearning soul ! We ne'er may meet , for myriad ...
Page 37
... thou may'st never see , These fond but feeble lines , so far away from thee . HORACE AND JUVENAL AS SATIRISTS . SOME THOUGHTS ON JUVENAL . In turning from the elegance and refinement of the Augustan age to the prostitution and ...
... thou may'st never see , These fond but feeble lines , so far away from thee . HORACE AND JUVENAL AS SATIRISTS . SOME THOUGHTS ON JUVENAL . In turning from the elegance and refinement of the Augustan age to the prostitution and ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
admirable Balm of Gilead beautiful Bernhardi better Bosphorus breath Bunkum Flag-Staff Caliph called CATULLUS character cholera dark dead dear death delight dream earth eyes fair feel feet flowers Fort Schuyler Frostburg give Hackensack hand hath head heard heart heaven hill honor hope Horicon hour Juvenal Khorasan kind King of Dahomey KNICKERBOCKER lady Lake Lake George Lake House land light live look Lord BYRON Mary Fuller mind morning mountain nature never New-York night noble o'er once passed Persian person Piermont pleasant poet poor present pulpit racter readers remark scene Schenectady seemed seen side smile soon soul spirit sweet tell thee thing thou thought tion trees truth turned wave wife wild wonder words write young