| Thomas Gray, William Mason - Poetics - 1827 - 468 pages
...happy hills, ah pleasing shade, Ah fields belov'd in vain, Where once my careless childhood stray'd, A stranger yet to pain ! I feel the gales, that from ye blow, A momentary bliss bestow, As waving fresh their gladsome wing, My weary soul they seem to soothe.... | |
| George Barrell Cheever - American poetry - 1830 - 516 pages
...hills ! ah, pleasing shade ! Ah, fields belov'd in vain ! Where once my careless childhood stray'd, A stranger yet to pain ! I feel the gales that from ye blow A momentary bliss bestow, As waving fresh their gladsome wing, My weary soul they seem to soothe,... | |
| Thomas F. Walker - English poetry - 1830 - 256 pages
...happy hills, ah, pleasing shade, Ah, fields belovM in vain, Where once my careless childhood stray'd, A stranger yet to pain! I feel the gales, that from ye blow, A momentary bliss bestow, As waving fresh their gladsome wing, My weary soul they seem to soothe,... | |
| William Lisle Bowles - Anglican Communion - 1831 - 372 pages
...childhood stray 'd, A stranger yet to pain ; I feel the gales that from you blow A momentary bliss bestow, As waving fresh their gladsome wing, My weary soul...they seem to sooth, And redolent of joy and youth, To breathe a second Spring." I shall be pardoned, if, from Wycchamical feelings, I dare to attempt putting... | |
| Gift books - 1831 - 306 pages
...hardly recal to the reader's mind :— I feel the gales that from you blow A momentary bliss bestow, As waving fresh their gladsome wing My weary soul they seem to soothe, And, redolent of joy and youth, To breathe a second spring. It is in the poem, however, of... | |
| Samuel BLACKBURN - 1833 - 254 pages
...hills ! ah, pleasing shade ! Ah, fields belov'd in vain, Where once my careless childhood stray'd, A stranger yet to pain ! I feel the gales that from ye blow, A momentary bliss bestow, As waving fresh their gladsome wing, My weary soul they seem to sooth,... | |
| James Herring - United States - 1834 - 468 pages
...that so happily treated by Gray. The lover of the muses may truly say, I feel the gales that round ye hlow A momentary hliss hestow, As, waving fresh their gladsome wing, My weary soul they seem to soothe, And redolent of joy and youth To hreathe a second spring. The contrast, indeed, is somewhat... | |
| Robert Burns, Allan Cunningham - Ballads, Scots - 1834 - 370 pages
...happy hills ! ah pleasing shade ! Ah fields beloved in vain, Where once my caieless childhood strayed A stranger yet to pain. I feel the gales that from ye blow A momentary bliss bestow, As waving freah their gladsome wing, My weary soul they seem to sooth,... | |
| John Landseer - Painting - 1834 - 534 pages
...Cyclop—from the pencil of Poussin : " —The gales that from them blow, A momentary bliss bestow : The weary soul they seem to sooth, And, redolent of joy and youth— He breathes life's second spring." But so hasty, or uninformed, or unobservant; and so temerarious,... | |
| Friedrich von Matthisson - German literature - 1835
...the gales , that from ye iloiv , A momentary blifs bestow , As wavin fresh their gladsome wing , THy weary soul they seem to sooth , • And redolent of joy and youth, To breathea second spring. .4 •Rit ïann id) biefe ©tanje roieSecCoten/ oCne т{ф t'm 3nner(ïen beroegt... | |
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