| Mme. Lucien Davesiès de Pontès - 1858 - 532 pages
...a cushion soft and fair Of finest silk that Persia wove, She bore that treasure, rich and rare, All earthly joy, or bliss above! To which no mortal dare...which relate to the St. Graal, in a symbolic sense "as a picture of the secret struggles of the soul (*), the com(') SUlllmur'S Weirtjidjte Hr fceiujrfjen... | |
| Gustav Solling - 1859 - 174 pages
...a cushion soft and fair Of finest silk that Persia wove, She bore that treasure, rich and rare, All earthly joy or bliss above ! To which no mortal dare...aspire ! Above the reach of all desire, The Holy Graal !* After a splendid banquet " Parcival" retires to rest. On the following morning he finds his horse... | |
| 1870 - 644 pages
...cushion, soft and fair, Of finest silk that Persia wove, She bore that treasure, rich and rare, All earthly joy or bliss above ! To which no mortal dare...aspire ! Above the reach of all desire, The Holy Graal ! ' * " After a splendid banquet, Parcival retires to rest. On the following morning he finds his horse... | |
| Julian Hawthorne - 1906 - 438 pages
...jewell'd zone, Were green as grass, when freshly grown I She bore that treasure, rich and rare, All earthly joy, or bliss above ! To which no mortal dare aspire ! Above the reach of all desire, The Holy Grail ! Parcival retires to rest. Next morning he finds beside him his vestments and a rich scimitar... | |
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