Look out upon the real world, where the moon, Half-way 'twixt root and crown of these high trees, Turns the dead midnight into dreamy noon, Silent and full of wonders, for the breeze Died at the sunset, and no images, No hopes of day, are left in sky... The Earthly Paradise: A Poem - Stranica 254napisao/la William Morris - 1890 - Broj stranica: 445Potpun prikaz - O ovoj knjizi
| Cecil Maxwell - 1876 - Broj stranica: 308
...garden. CHAPTER XXIX. " Fair death of things that living once were fair; Bright sign of loveliness too great for me, Strange image of the dread eternity,...These outstretched feverish hands, this restless heart ? " AS Pamela hastened along the road homewards, the sullen drapery of cloud to westward opened for... | |
| Cecil Maxwell - 1876 - Broj stranica: 316
..."She is gone," said Mrs. Turrell; "she said she had over-stayed her time already." CHAPTER XXIX. " Fair death of things that living once were fair; Bright sign of loveliness too great for me, Strange image of the dread eternity, In whose void patience how can these... | |
| Frederic William Henry Myers - 1893 - Broj stranica: 270
...confronted with the everlasting universe, man that must die feels more than the bitterness of death, Look out upon the real world, where the moon, Half-way...These outstretched feverish hands, this restless heart ? We have traced in the work of these two poets almost every mood of feeling possible to high-minded... | |
| William Morris - 1904 - Broj stranica: 412
...make it blind and nought ? Art thou so weary that no world there seems Beyond these four walls, hung with pain, and dreams ? Look out upon the real world,...These outstretched feverish hands, this restless heart ? DECEMBER. Dead lonely night and all streets quiet now, Thin o'er the moon the hindmost cloud swims... | |
| Alfred Noyes - 1908 - Broj stranica: 176
..."where the moon, between root and crown of these high trees, turns the dead midnight into dreamy noon ; is it not fair, and of most wondrous worth ? " Yea,...how can these have part, These outstretched feverish hamls, this restless heart '< It is obvious how these personal utterances are intended to contrast... | |
| Alfred Noyes - 1908 - Broj stranica: 176
...high trees, turns the dead midnight into dreamy noon ; is it not fair, and of most wondrous worth 1 " Yea, I have looked, and seen November there ; The...These outstretched feverish hands, this restless heart ? It is obvious how these personal utterances are intended to contrast with Morris's pictures of those... | |
| Paul Elmer More - 1910 - Broj stranica: 284
...the prologue to the tales of November, wherein he expresses this revulsion from the two realities: Look out upon the real world, where the moon, Half-way...outstretched feverish hands, this restless heart? In those lines is something of the grand manner, as it is found rarely, if anywhere else, in Morris... | |
| Paul Elmer More - 1910 - Broj stranica: 492
...the prologue to the tales of November, wherein he expresses this revulsion from the two realities: Look out upon the real world, where the moon, Half-way...outstretched feverish hands, this restless heart? In those lines is something of the grand manner, as it is found rarely, if anywhere else, in Morris... | |
| Sir Henry John Newbolt - 1922 - Broj stranica: 1032
...no images, No hopes of day, are left in sky or earth— Is it not fair, and of most wondrous worth t Yea, I have looked and seen November there; The changeless...These outstretched feverish hands, this restless heart < THE HOLLOW LAND OFTEN too we would sit outside the walls and look at the trees and sky, and the ways... | |
| George Roy Elliott, Norman Foerster - 1923 - Broj stranica: 864
...earth — Is it not fair, and of most wondrous worth? Yea, I have looked and seen November there: 15 The changeless seal of change it seemed to be, Fair...In whose • void patience how can these have part, 20 These outstretched feverish hands, this restless heart? THE GOLDEN APPLES ARGUMENT: Thls tale tells... | |
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