I flow, E'en in swift course the river seems to rest, Blue sky, bright bloom and verdure imag'd on its breast. And, whilst with thee I roam through regions bright Beneath kind love's serene and gladsome sky, A thousand happy things that seek the light,... Phantasmion - Page 247by Sara Coleridge Coleridge - 1837 - 387 pagesFull view - About this book
| Sara Coleridge Coleridge - 1837 - 400 pages
...through desert moor and gloomy glade, My waters ever vex'd, yet sad and slow, My waters ever steep'd in baleful shade : But, whilst with thee, rich stream,...asleep, and, when her eyes were fast sealed in slumber, Phantasmion heard a shrill voice, crying, " Awake, young prince of Palmland, awake !" He raised his... | |
| Sara Coleridge - 1873 - 390 pages
...circumstances of her girlhood, she was encouraged and enabled to put forth all her best powers — " A thousand happy things that seek the light, Till now in darkest shadow forced to lie," * * From a song in " Phantasmion. " 42 Memoir and Letters of Sara Coleridge. began... | |
| William Davenport Adams - 1885 - 192 pages
...through desert moor and gloomy shade, My waters ever vex'd, yet sad and slow, My waters ever steep'd in baleful shade: But whilst with thee, rich stream,...lie, Up through the illumin'd waters nimbly run, To show their forms and hues in the all-revealing sun. SARA COLERIDGE. ROCHESTER'S SONG. HE truest love... | |
| William Davenport Adams - 1885 - 190 pages
...My waters ever steep'd in baleful shade : But whilst with thee, rich stream, conjoin'd I flow,E'en in swift course the river seems to rest, Blue sky,...lie, Up through the illumin'd waters nimbly run, To show their forms and hues in the all-revealing sun. SARA COLERIDGE. [From Phtmtasmion, part iii. chap.... | |
| Algernon Charles Swinburne - 1887 - 390 pages
...swift course the river seems to rest, Blue sky, bright bloom, and verdure imag'd on its breast 243 And, whilst with thee I roam through regions bright,...lie, Up through the illumin'd waters nimbly run, To show their forms and hues in the all-revealing sun. SARA COLERIDGE. [From Phantasmion, Part iii., Chap,... | |
| Ernest Albert Baker - 1908 - 316 pages
...sad and slow, My waters ever steep'd in baleful shade : But, whilst with thee, rich stream, conjoined I flow, E'en in swift course the river seems to rest,...lie, Up through the illumin'd waters nimbly run, To show their forms and hues in the all revealing sun. How High yon Lark TT OW high yon lark is heavenward... | |
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