| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1904 - 710 páginas
...rides in the pursuit of his calling over the Breconshire moorlands. ' It is the only time,' he writes, 'That with Thy glory doth best chime; All now are stirring, ev'ry field Pull hymns doth yield; The whole creation shakes off night, And for Thy shadow looks, the light; Stars... | |
| 1905 - 218 páginas
...midnight ? Unlock Thy bowers ? And with their blush of light descry Thy locks, crown'd with eternity ? Indeed, it is the only time That with Thy glory doth best chime. All now are stirring ; every field Full hymns doth yield ; And for Thy shadow looks the light ; Stars now vanish without... | |
| Henry Vaughan - 1905 - 466 páginas
...fragrant hours Unlock Thy bowers? And with their blush of light descry Thy locks crowned with Eternity? Indeed, it is the only time That with Thy glory doth best chime; All now are stirring, every field Full hymns doth yield ; The whole creation shakes off night, And for Thy shadow looks,... | |
| William Stanley Braithwaite - 1909 - 892 páginas
...shall these early, fragrant hours That with Thy glory doth best chime; All now are stirring, every field Full hymns doth yield; The whole creation shakes...looks, the light; Stars now vanish without number, Sleepy planets set and slumber, The pursy clouds disband and scatter, All expect some sudden matter,... | |
| John Vaughan - 1913 - 166 páginas
...— " Or shall these early fragrant hours Unlock Thy bowers ? " It must surely be at sun-rising. " Indeed it is the only time That with Thy glory doth best chime." (d) Psalm cxix. — A Meditation. In treating of the meditative aspect of the Psalter, it is impossible... | |
| Henry Vaughan - 1914 - 332 páginas
...fragrant hours Unlock thy bowresP And with their blush of light descry Thy locks crown'd with etemi tie ? Indeed, it is the only time That with thy glory doth...light; Stars now vanish without number, Sleepie planets sot and slumber, Tho pursio clouds disband and scatter, All expect some sudden matter ; Not one beam... | |
| Henry Vaughan - 1914 - 350 páginas
...hours Unlock thy bowres ? 10 And with their blush of light descry Thy locks crown'd with eternitie ; Indeed, it is the only time That with thy glory doth best chime, All now are stirring, ev'ry field Ful hymns doth yield, The whole Creation shakes off night, And for thy shadow looks the light, Stars... | |
| Henry Vaughan - 1914 - 348 páginas
...hours Unlock thy bowres ? 10 And with their blush of light descry Thy locks crown'd with eternitie ; Indeed, it is the only time That with thy glory doth best chime, All now are stirring, ev'ry field Ful hymns doth yield, The whole Creation shakes off night, And for thy shadow looks the light, Stars... | |
| Arthur Clutton-Brock - 1921 - 210 páginas
...but nowhere does it happen more naturally or with more good faith than in the poetry of Vaughan : — The whole creation shakes off night, And for thy shadow...looks the light ; Stars now vanish without number, Sleepy planets set and slumber, The pursy clouds disband and scatter, All expect some sudden matter... | |
| 1922 - 276 páginas
...The vocal silence of his eye." " Bright books ! . . . The track of fled souls and their Milky Way." " The whole creation shakes off night, And for Thy shadow looks, the light." In an invocation to the Deity he touches the sublime : " There is in God — some say — a deep, but... | |
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