Poems, 第 2 卷Biggs and Cottle, 1799 - 232页 |
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共有 18 个结果,这是第 1-5 个
第43页
... tell Their beads , and make long prayers , and cross themselves , And call themselves most miserable finners , That so they might be deem'd most pious saints ; And go all filth , and never let a smile Bend their stern muscles , gloomy ...
... tell Their beads , and make long prayers , and cross themselves , And call themselves most miserable finners , That so they might be deem'd most pious saints ; And go all filth , and never let a smile Bend their stern muscles , gloomy ...
第55页
... tell , " Remembering me , his child , in every prayer . " Oh ! quiet be thy sleep , thou dear old man ! " Good Angels guard thy rest ! and when thine hour " Is come , as gently mayest thou wake to life , " As when thro ' yonder lattice ...
... tell , " Remembering me , his child , in every prayer . " Oh ! quiet be thy sleep , thou dear old man ! " Good Angels guard thy rest ! and when thine hour " Is come , as gently mayest thou wake to life , " As when thro ' yonder lattice ...
第99页
... tell to you my friend The things that were told of them ! Did'st see an out - house standing by ? The walls alone remain ; It was a stable then , but now Its mossy roof has fallen through All rotted by the rain . The poor girl she had ...
... tell to you my friend The things that were told of them ! Did'st see an out - house standing by ? The walls alone remain ; It was a stable then , but now Its mossy roof has fallen through All rotted by the rain . The poor girl she had ...
第110页
... tell me where to fly from him ! Oh tell me where to go ! But tell me , quoth the Stranger then , What this thy crime hath been , So haply I may comfort give To one that grieves for sin . OI have done a cursed deed The wretched man ...
... tell me where to fly from him ! Oh tell me where to go ! But tell me , quoth the Stranger then , What this thy crime hath been , So haply I may comfort give To one that grieves for sin . OI have done a cursed deed The wretched man ...
第114页
... tell me where to fly- And bid me hope , if there be hope , For one so lost as I. Poor wretch , the stranger he replied , Put thou thy trust in heaven , And call on him for whose dear sake All sins shall be forgiven . This night at least ...
... tell me where to fly- And bid me hope , if there be hope , For one so lost as I. Poor wretch , the stranger he replied , Put thou thy trust in heaven , And call on him for whose dear sake All sins shall be forgiven . This night at least ...
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常见术语和短语
amid ask'd ATROPOS beam'd beheld Beneath bless blood breast Bristol cheek child choristers church door cold comfort conscience corpse cried Dæmon dark dead dear death deep docet dreadful dwell dwelt earth ECLOGUE exclaim'd fear fifty priests fire gaze glory GRANDMOTHER grave grew groan groan'd guilt guineas Guntram hand hast hath hear heard heart Heaven hour Jaspar journey's end lanthorn light live lonely look look'd Lord William Madelon MAID OF ORLEANS Maiden Martin's lane Matthew of Westminster mortal murderer never night o'er Old Woman pale patent coffin paus'd poison'd poor pray prayer quæ rest rose round scene sche sick sleep smile soon soul spake stood STRANGER stream tale tell thee Theodore thine thou thought thro toil told TRAVELLER trembled Twas twill undisturb'd vestry voice wind winding sheet witchcraft wretched wretchedness Zillah
热门引用章节
第81页 - Twas evening, and the frozen streets Were cheerless to behold, And we were wrapt and coated well, And yet we were a-cold. We met an old bare-headed man, His locks were few and white; I...
第82页 - Twas bitter keen, indeed, he said, But at home no fire had he, And therefore he had come abroad To ask for charity. We met a young bare-footed child, And she begged loud and bold; I asked her what she did abroad When the wind it blew so cold.
第159页 - And the coffin lid that was barr'd so firm He burst with his voice of thunder. And he bade the Old Woman of Berkeley...
第138页 - twas midnight now, No human aid was near. He heard the shout of joy, for now A boat approach'd the wall, And eager to the welcome aid They crowd for safety all. " My boat is small," the boatman cried, " 'Twill bear but one away ; Come in, Lord William, and do ye In God's protection stay.
第175页 - Who by his labour lived ; that he was one Whose uncorrupted heart could keenly feel A husband's love, a father's anxiousness, That from the wages of his toil he fed The distant dear ones, and would talk of them At midnight when he trod the silent deck With him he valued, talk of them, of joys...
第153页 - And then I may rest in my grave." The old woman of Berkeley laid her down, And her eyes grew deadly dim, Short came her breath and the struggle of death Did loosen every limb. They...
第138页 - Twas music to his ear. When lo ! the voice of loud alarm His inmost soul appals ; " What ho ! Lord William, rise in haste ! The water saps thy walls !" He rose in haste, beneath the walls He saw the flood appear ; It hemm'd him round, 'twas midnight now, No human aid was near.
第34页 - Is forced to sup whole draughts of molten gold ; There is the murderer for ever stabb'd, Yet can he never die ; there lies the wanton On racks of burning steel, whilst in his soul He feels the torment of his raging lust. Ann. Mercy ! oh, mercy ! Friar. There stand these wretched things, Who have dream'd out whole years in lawless sheets And secret incests, cursing one another...
第117页 - It came from mine own heart, so to my head, And thence into my fingers trickled; Then to my pen, from whence immediately On paper I did dribble it daintily.
第136页 - Young Edmund's dying day. A fearful day was that ! the rains Fell fast with tempest roar, And the swoln tide of Severn spread Far on the level shore. In vain Lord William sought the feast, In vain he quaff'd the bowl, And strove with noisy mirth...