Gradually the sounds roll forth in a song" of rejoicing to the God of Day. " Of thy intensity And great immensity Now then we sing ; Beholding in gratitude Thee in this latitude, Curious thing.* Which swells out into " Hey Jim along, Jim along Josey,"... Phoenixiana: Or, Sketches and Burlesques - Page 46by George Horatio Derby - 1856 - 274 pagesFull view - About this book
| George Horatio Derby - 1889 - 304 pages
...sounds roll forth in a song " of rejoicing to the God of Day. " Of thy intensity And great immensity Now then we sing; Beholding in gratitude Thee in this...consisting of seven families, with forty-six wagons, eaoh drawn by thirteen oxen ; each family consists of a man in butternut-colored clothing driving the... | |
| Stedman, Edmund C. and Hutchinson Ellen M. - 1889 - 706 pages
...sounds roll forth in a song" of rejoicing to the God of Day: " Of thy intensity And great immensity Now the.n we sing; Beholding in gratitude Thee in...swells out into " Hey Jim along, Jim along Josey," then descrescendo mas o menos, poco pocita, dies away and dries up. Suddenly we hear approaching a train... | |
| Music - 1899 - 916 pages
...Immensity Now then we sing. Beholding in gratitude Thee in this latitude, Curious thing. which swells into 'Hey Jim along, Jim along Josey,' then decrescendo,...mas o menos, poco pocita, dies away and dries up." All of which is commended to the attention of those who compose analytical programs. * * * In another... | |
| Marshall Pinckney Wilder - American literature - 1907 - 202 pages
...sounds roll forth in a song" of rejoicing to the God of Day : "Of thy intensity And great immensity Now then we sing; Beholding in gratitude Thee in this latitude, Curious thing." VoL ' ' ' Which swells out into "Hey Jim along, Jim along Josey," then decrescendo, mas o menos, poco... | |
| Fred Lewis Pattee - American literature - 1915 - 472 pages
...superstitious man, by any means — but, he left." It was Derby who wrote the first Pike County ballad. "Suddenly we hear approaching a train from Pike County,...with forty-six wagons, each drawn by thirteen oxen. ' ' Elsewhere he has described the typical ' ' Pike " : " His hair is light, not a 'sable silvered,'... | |
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