| George Barrell Cheever - American poetry - 1830 - 516 pages
...one, still, sightless level make the earth, Like thy dull, lonely, joyless Soul, — a dearth. •x > The rill is tuneless to his ear who feels No harmony...within ; the south wind steals As silent as unseen amongst the leaves. Who has no inward beauty, none perceives, Though all around is beautiful. Nay,... | |
| A. B. Cleveland - American literature - 1832 - 496 pages
...tuneless to his ear, who feels No harmony within; the south wind steals As silent as unseen amongst the leaves. Who has no inward beauty, none perceives,...calmest hour, he hears the roar Of winds and flinging waves—puts out the light, When high and angry passions meet in fight; And his own spirit into tumult... | |
| American poetry - 1839 - 430 pages
...And one still, sightless level make the earth, th,j; du!i * ,: lonely; joyless soul, — a dearth. Though all around is beautiful. Nay, more— In nature's...calmest hour, he hears the roar Of winds and flinging waves—puts out the light, And, his own spirit into tumult hurled, When high and angry passions meet... | |
| George Barrell Cheever - American poetry - 1841 - 422 pages
...sky, And one still, sightless level make the earth, Like thy dull, lonely, joyless soul, — a dearth. The rill is tuneless to his ear, who feels No harmony...within ; the south wind steals As silent as unseen amongst the leaves. Who has no inward heauty, none perceives. Though all around is beautiful. Nay,... | |
| Benjamin Fiske Barrett - 1842 - 470 pages
..." The rill is tuneless to his ear, who feela No harmony within ; the south wind steals As silent MS unseen among the leaves. Who has no inward beauty. none perceives, Though all around is beautiful. ******* Turn where thou wilt, thyself in all things see Reflected back." But on account of the greater... | |
| Religion - 1842 - 1046 pages
...alone discern that which is spiritual. The rill is tuneless to his ear ' . ' Who has no harmony within; Who has no inward beauty none perceives, Though all around is beautiful. The gospel is addressed to the moral sense ; and if that be bleared or blunted, the gospel must remain... | |
| J. Fletcher - 1842 - 478 pages
...alone discern that which is spiritual. The rill is tuneless to his ear Who has no harmony within ; Who has no inward beauty none perceives, Though all around is beautiful. The gospel is addressed to the moral sense ; and if that be bleared or blunted, the gospel must remain... | |
| Theology - 1842 - 514 pages
...alone discern that which is spiritual. The rill is tuneless to his ear Who has no harmony within ; Who has no inward beauty none perceives, Though all around is beautiful. The gospel is addressed to the moral sense ; and if that be bleared or blunted, the gospel must remain... | |
| Francis Mason - Christian converts - 1843 - 190 pages
...blind to moral beauty. " Who has no inward beauty, none perceives, Though all around is beautiful. The rill is tuneless to his ear, who feels No harmony within." himself; no very common attainment, by the way, in Christian lands. While in Tavoy he had a son, and... | |
| Lydia Maria Child - Biography & Autobiography - 1843 - 334 pages
...of things to human eyes." The fault was in my own spirit rather than in the streets of New York. " Who has no inward beauty, none perceives, though all around is beautiful." Had my soul been at one with Nature and with God, I should not have seen only misery and vice in my... | |
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