| 1822 - 326 pages
...! whence are thy beams, O sun ? thy everlasting light ! Thou comest forth in thy awful beauty, and the stars hide themselves in the sky: The moon, cold...can be a companion of thy course ? The oaks of the mountain fall; the mountains themselves decay with years; the ocean shrinks, and grows again ; the... | |
| Hugh Campbell - Celts - 1822 - 416 pages
...round as the shield of my fathers ! Whence are thy beams, O sun ! thy everlasting light ? Thou comest forth, in thy awful beauty ; the stars hide themselves...pale, sinks in the western wave. But thou thyself niovest alone : who can be a companion of thy course ! The oaks of the mountains fall : the mountains... | |
| John Bowring - English poetry - 1822 - 282 pages
...as the shield of my fathers !. whence are thy beams, O sun ! — thy everlasting light ? Thou comest forth in thy awful beauty, the stars hide themselves in the sky: the moon coW and pale sinks in the western wave. But thou thyself movest alone •• who can be a companion... | |
| Lionel Thomas Berguer - English essays - 1823 - 334 pages
...fathers? whence are thy beams, O Sun? thy everlasting light ! Thou comest forth in thy awful beauty, and the stars hide themselves in the sky : The moon, cold...can be a companion of thy course? The oaks of the mountain fall ; the mountains themselves decay with years ; the ocean shrinks, and grows again ; the... | |
| Lionel Thomas Berguer - English essays - 1823 - 690 pages
...? whence are thy beams, O Sun ? thy everlasting light ! Thou comest forth in thy awful beauty, and the stars hide themselves in the sky : The moon, cold...can be a companion of thy course ? The oaks of the mountain fall ; the mountains themselves decay with years ; the ocean shrinks, and grows again ; the... | |
| John Pierpont - Recitations - 1823 - 492 pages
...! Whence are thy beams, O sun ! thy everlasting light ? Thou comest forth, in thy awful beauty, and the stars hide themselves in the sky ; the moon, cold...movest alone : •who can be a companion of thy course 1 The oaks of the Ltison 130.] FIRST CLASS BOOK. 283 mountains fall : the mountains themselves decay... | |
| Domestic, literary and village sketches - Great Britain - 1823 - 168 pages
...round as the shield of my fathers ! Whence are thy beams, O sun I thy everlasting light? Thou comest forth, in thy awful beauty ; the stars hide themselves in the sky ; the moon pale and cold, sinks in the western wave. But thou thyself movest alone : who can be the companion... | |
| Benjamin Humphrey Smart - Elocution - 1826 - 242 pages
...Plaintive. O thou, that rollest above, whence are tby beams, O Sun, thy everlasting light ? Thou comest forth in thy awful beauty : the stars hide themselves...movest alone. Who can be a companion of thy course ? — 2 The oaks of the mountains fall ; the mountains themselves decay with years ; the ocean shrinks... | |
| James Nack - 1827 - 218 pages
...Rejoicest in thy course alone : The mountain oaks to time shall bow ; The mountain's selves be overthrown ; The ocean shrinks and grows again ; The moon herself is lost in heaven ; But thou the same shalt ever reign, In car of burning glory driven ! When tempests dark the world deform, When... | |
| Edmund Henry Barker - 1829 - 798 pages
...fathers, whence are thy beams, O Sun ! thy everlasting light? Thou comest forth in thy awful beauty, and the stars hide themselves in the sky ; the moon, cold...years ; the ocean shrinks and grows again ; the moon * " One is led to think from this paragraph that the scepticism, which Mr. Gray had expressed before,... | |
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