| Thomas Humphry Ward - 1880 - 644 стор.
...beautiful to be lost. It is a fragment of an ode for May-day. O might I, he cries to May, O might I ' thy smiles Seek as they once were sought, in Grecian...great verse unto a little clan ! O, give me their old vigour, and unheard Save of the quiet primrose, and the span Of heaven, and few ears, Rounded by thee,... | |
| Thomas Humphry Ward - 1880 - 650 стор.
...beautiful to be lost. It is a fragment of an ode for May-day. O might I, he cries to May, O might I ' thy smiles Seek as they once were sought, in Grecian...great verse unto a little clan ! O, give me their old vigour, and unheard Save of the quiet primrose, and the span Of heaven, and few ears, Rounded by thee,... | |
| Thomas Humphry Ward - 1880 - 648 стор.
...beautiful to be lost. It is a fragment of an ode for May-day. O might I, he cries to May, O might 1 ' thy smiles Seek as they once were sought, in Grecian...pleasant sward, Leaving great verse unto a little clan I O, give me their old vigour, and unheard Save of the quiet primrose, and the span Of heaven, and... | |
| 1880 - 492 стор.
...so much the better; it was even so with those Greeks whose epitaph Keats has so succinctly written : Bards who died content on pleasant sward Leaving great verse unto a little clan. All the remarkable prose-writers of that period, in America — Emerson in his serene calms, Hawthorne... | |
| 1880 - 492 стор.
...the better; it was even so with those Greeks whose epitaph Keats has so succinctly written : Hards who died content on pleasant sward Leaving great verse unto a little clan. All the remarkable prose-writers of that period, in America — Emerson in his serene calms, Hawthorne... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1881 - 654 стор.
...beautiful to be lost. It is a fragment of an ode for May-day. O might I, he cries to May, O might I ' thy smiles Seek as they once were sought, in Grecian...great verse unto a little clan ! O, give me their old vigour, and unheard Save of the quiet primrose, and the span Of heaven, and few ears, Rounded by thee,... | |
| John Keats - 1882 - 440 стор.
...Hermes ! and still youthful Maia ! May I sing to thee As them wast hymned on the shores of Baias ? Or may I woo thee In earlier Sicilian? or thy smiles...great verse unto a little clan? O, give me their old vigour, and unheard Save of the quiet Primrose, and the span Of heaven and few ears, Rounded by thee,... | |
| John Burroughs, Edmund Clarence Stedman - 1882 - 194 стор.
...could readily believe it a fragment descended from some sublime-hearted Grecian bard, one of those who " died content on pleasant sward, Leaving great verse unto a little clan." This ode contains but fourteen lines, long and short ; but they are, as their poet wished them to be,... | |
| John Keats - 1883 - 310 стор.
...all in good time." /T\ OTH ER of Hermes ! and still youthful Maia ! «> • ^» May I sing to thee As thou wast hymned on the shores of Baise ? Or may...great verse unto a little clan? O, give me their old vigour, and unheard Save of the quiet primrose, and the span Of heaven and few ears, Rounded by thee,... | |
| John Keats - 1883 - 608 стор.
...MOTHER of Hermes! and still youthful Maia May I sing to thee As thou wast hymned on the shores of Bais ? Or may I woo thee In earlier Sicilian ? or thy smiles...great verse unto a little clan ? O, give me their old vigour, and unheard Save of the quiet Primrose, and the span Of heaven and few ears, Rounded by thee,... | |
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