The Book of the Seasons, Or The Calender of Nature |
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... feeling is kept alive by a persuasion that the peculiar combination of physical and mental qualities prized so highly has , as a matter of fact , been the principal cause of the success of England . She has tried its merits in a ...
... feeling is kept alive by a persuasion that the peculiar combination of physical and mental qualities prized so highly has , as a matter of fact , been the principal cause of the success of England . She has tried its merits in a ...
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... feeling which runs in a channel too broad to be easily stopped towards a relish for all in the varied life of man that is analogous to the peculiar beauty of nature in England . The only considerable poet of Puritanism in latter days ...
... feeling which runs in a channel too broad to be easily stopped towards a relish for all in the varied life of man that is analogous to the peculiar beauty of nature in England . The only considerable poet of Puritanism in latter days ...
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... feel and help to increase the greatness of England- who are capable of great deeds , of enduring great trials , and of comprehending great principles . In the person of Henry V. Shakspeare has embodied what he seems to have considered ...
... feel and help to increase the greatness of England- who are capable of great deeds , of enduring great trials , and of comprehending great principles . In the person of Henry V. Shakspeare has embodied what he seems to have considered ...
Page xvi
... feel , as expressed in his own simile : - As one who long in populous city pent , Where houses thick and sewers annoy the air , Forth issuing on a summer morn to breathe Among the pleasant villages and farms . But the full extent of his ...
... feel , as expressed in his own simile : - As one who long in populous city pent , Where houses thick and sewers annoy the air , Forth issuing on a summer morn to breathe Among the pleasant villages and farms . But the full extent of his ...
Page xvii
... feel thy sovran , vital lamp ; but thou Revisit'st not these eyes , that roll in vain To find thy piercing ray , and find no dawn ; So thick a drop serene hath quenched their orbs , Or dim suffusion veiled : yet not the more Cease I to ...
... feel thy sovran , vital lamp ; but thou Revisit'st not these eyes , that roll in vain To find thy piercing ray , and find no dawn ; So thick a drop serene hath quenched their orbs , Or dim suffusion veiled : yet not the more Cease I to ...
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Common terms and phrases
aliis Alpine amongst autumn Azalea banks beauty bees behold birds blue bogs boughs Broad-leaved Butterfly CALENDAR OF BRITISH Chalky Cnicus coast comes April comes Aug comes Dec comes Nov comes Oct Common corn Corn-fields creatures cum mult Curruca delightful Ditches earth eggs Eringo Fieldfare fields flowers forest fresh Fritillary frost Fumitory Gardens Globe-flower goes Feb goes Sept Goosander grass green Haunts Hawkweed heart Hipparchia Hornbeam insects John's-wort larvæ leaves Marsh MARY HOWITT Meadows and pastures Moist month Moth mountains mult Nature nest numbers Orchis Phlox plants pleasant poets Polyommatus pools Primula Purple Rest-Harrow Rhododendron rivers rocks Sandy places Saxifrage Scotland Sea-shore season SELECT CALENDAR snow species Spiræa spirit spring Star of Bethlehem streams summer sweet thou trees tures Viburnum vulgaris Waste ground Watery places White wild Willow winter Woods and hedges Yellow young Zinnia