The Poets' World: An Anthology of English PoetryJames Reeves |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 62
Page 232
... wind are sown ; The names of men blow soundless by , My fellows ' and my own . Oh , lads , at home I heard you plain , But here your speech is still , And down the sighing wind in vain You hollo from the hill . The wind and I , we both ...
... wind are sown ; The names of men blow soundless by , My fellows ' and my own . Oh , lads , at home I heard you plain , But here your speech is still , And down the sighing wind in vain You hollo from the hill . The wind and I , we both ...
Page 236
... wind were blowing , And though the winter wind is bad I should not be too down in the mouth For anything you did or said If but this wind were in the south . ' But the other cried , ' You long for spring Or that the wind would shift a ...
... wind were blowing , And though the winter wind is bad I should not be too down in the mouth For anything you did or said If but this wind were in the south . ' But the other cried , ' You long for spring Or that the wind would shift a ...
Page 292
... Wind is his expression of this belief . The west wind in autumn strips the old foliage from the trees and scatters the seeds of future growth : ' Let me ' , he says at the end of the poem , ' be the voice of the west wind , spreading ...
... Wind is his expression of this belief . The west wind in autumn strips the old foliage from the trees and scatters the seeds of future growth : ' Let me ' , he says at the end of the poem , ' be the voice of the west wind , spreading ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
ancient Mariner Arthur Waley BATTLE OF MALDON beat beauty bell beneath birds blood blow BOOM boomlay breath bright chain the lions cloud cold Congo cried curse Cusha dark David Herbert Lawrence dead dear death dream earth Edward eyes fear Feet in Ancient fire flowers Gavin Bone glory golden green hand happy hath hear heard heart Heaven hill holy John Skelton King Kubla Khan land laughed light Lindis live look Lord loud Lyke-Wake Dirge mist moon morn mother Mumbo-Jumbo will hoo-doo ne'er never night o'er Ozymandias play poem poet poetry round sails ship sigh sing sleep song soul sound spirit stars stone stood strange sweet sword thee thine things thou thought Timor Mortis conturbat tree TWA SISTERS twas uppe voice W. H. Davies waves Wedding-Guest wild William Shakespeare wind witch-men wood