The Seasons: a Poem |
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Page 38
Now past the given hour For rest beneath the bower , In heavy drops descends the pouring rain , The thunder rolls afar , While clouds prepared for war Portend the coming storm ! Arous'd amain , Gaze up in awe th ' assembled crew ...
Now past the given hour For rest beneath the bower , In heavy drops descends the pouring rain , The thunder rolls afar , While clouds prepared for war Portend the coming storm ! Arous'd amain , Gaze up in awe th ' assembled crew ...
Page 39
War with each other wage , In conflict fierce engage ; 6 Winged with red lightning , ' thunder loud and dire In peals re - echoes o'er the plain ; Increased , the storm , wide spreading , holds his boisterous reign . XIX .
War with each other wage , In conflict fierce engage ; 6 Winged with red lightning , ' thunder loud and dire In peals re - echoes o'er the plain ; Increased , the storm , wide spreading , holds his boisterous reign . XIX .
Page 41
... Lament our wayward years ; With strength renewed , our former weakness own , In quest of harbour near that peaceful shore Where storms no longer rage , and thunder peals no XXIII . Shall songs of Summer's day Conclude our present.
... Lament our wayward years ; With strength renewed , our former weakness own , In quest of harbour near that peaceful shore Where storms no longer rage , and thunder peals no XXIII . Shall songs of Summer's day Conclude our present.
Page 47
Gratitude to the Giver of all good Things - Allusions to Mythological Legends connected with Autumn - PomonaVertumnus — The Promise of annually - recurring SeasonsThe Harvest - A Storm breaks over the Harvest Field — The Hockey Feast ...
Gratitude to the Giver of all good Things - Allusions to Mythological Legends connected with Autumn - PomonaVertumnus — The Promise of annually - recurring SeasonsThe Harvest - A Storm breaks over the Harvest Field — The Hockey Feast ...
Page 59
With haste the labourers load , As threatening clouds forebode A coming storm ; they sound the echoing horn ; Now all assemble to evade The pouring rains come down , and quick the waggons lade . XVI , Now frowns the riven sky ...
With haste the labourers load , As threatening clouds forebode A coming storm ; they sound the echoing horn ; Now all assemble to evade The pouring rains come down , and quick the waggons lade . XVI , Now frowns the riven sky ...
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Page 23 - Little Lessons for Little Learners, in Words of One Syllable. By Mrs. BARWELL.
Page 17 - Four Seasons (The) ; A Short Account of the Structure of Plants, being Four Lectures written for the Working Men's Institute, Paris. With Illustrations. Imperial 16mo.
Page 5 - Prayer is the burden of a sigh ; The falling of a tear ; The upward glancing of an eye When none but God is near. 3 Prayer is the simplest form of speech That infant lips can try ; Prayer, the sublimest strains that reach The majesty on high.
Page 23 - Upside Down: a Series of Amusing Pictures from Sketches by the late W. McCoNNELL, with Verses by THOMAS HOOD.
Page 24 - Rhymes and Pictures ABOUT BREAD, TEA, SUGAR, COTTON, COALS, AND GOLD. By WILLIAM NEWMAN. Seventy-two Illustrations. Price 2s. plain ; 3s.
Page 32 - THE AUSTRALIAN SHEPHERD. 6. Life Underground; OR, DICK THE COLLIERY BOY. 7. Life on the Coast ; OR, THE LITTLE FISHER GIRL. 8. Adventures of Two Orphans in London. 9. Early Days on Board a Man-of-War. 10. Walter, the Foundling : A TALE OF OLDEN TIMES. 11. The Tenants of Sunnyside Farm. 12. Holmwood: OR, THE NEW ZEALAND SETTLER.
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Page 29 - One of the most sensible little books on the subject of Geography we have met with.
Page 29 - Butler's Outline Maps, and Key, or GEOGRAPHICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL EXERCISES ; with a Set of Coloured Outline Maps, designed for the use of Young Persons. By the late WILLIAM BUTLER. Enlarged by the Author's Son, J.
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