| 1848 - 594 pages
...weedy lake, or marge of river wide ? Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side ? There is a Power whose care Teaches thy way...Lone wandering but not lost. All day thy wings have fanned, At that far height, the cold, thin atmosphere, Yet stoop not, weary, to the welcome land, Though... | |
| William Balmbro'. Flower - 1848 - 304 pages
...weedy lake or margin of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side. There is a power whose care Teaches thy way...illimitable air — Lone wandering, but not lost. it 2 All day thy wings have fanned, At that far height, the cold, thin atmosphere : Yet, stoop not,... | |
| American poetry - 1848 - 276 pages
...weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side ? There is a Power whose care Teaches thy way...pathless coast,— The desert and illimitable air,— THE NL / '/. PUBLIC LiD ASTOR, L*NOX TILDfcN FOUNDATIONS All day thy wings have fanned, At that far... | |
| Samuel Griswold Goodrich - Greece - 1849 - 384 pages
...beauty to a divine source ; without feeling that "There is a power whose care Teaches thy way along- the pathless coast, The desert and illimitable air, Lone wandering, but not lost.'" CHAPTER XXX1. The Muses, Graces, and Sirens. 1. THK Muses were nine sisters, daughters of Jupiter and... | |
| American poetry - 1850 - 264 pages
...weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side ? There is a Power whose care Teaches thy way...pathless coast,-— The desert and illimitable air, — All day thy wings have fanned, At that far height, the cold thin atmosphere, Yet stoop not, weary,... | |
| William Cullen Bryant - American poetry - 1851 - 380 pages
...weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side ? There is a Power whose care Teaches thy way...Lone wandering, but not lost. All day thy wings have fanned, • . At that far height, the cold, thin atmosphere, Yet stoop not, w.eary, to the welcome... | |
| William Francis Lynch - Science - 1851 - 322 pages
...the cold, thin, atmosphere, Yet stoop not, weary, to the welcome laud, Though the dark night is near. There is a Power whose care Teaches thy way along...illimitable air — Lone wandering — but not lost. Thou art gone — the abyss of heaven Hath swallowed up thy form." In those pure fields of ether, unvisited... | |
| S.G Goodrich - 1851 - 664 pages
...and terrible, without tracing that sublimity and beauty to a divine source; without feeling that " There is a power whose care Teaches thy way along...and illimitable air, Lone wandering, but not lost." The divinities of Greece were not held by the people to be mere passive phantoms. They are supposed... | |
| Edward Hughes - 1851 - 362 pages
...weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rooking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side ? There is a power whose care Teaches thy way...pathless coast — The desert and illimitable air — -8 Lone- wandering, but not lost. All day thy wings have fanned, At that far height, the cold,... | |
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