| René Louis Huchon - 1907 - 600 pages
...urged solely by the tide. In winter the observer may suddenly find himself wrapped in a dense fog : When you can hear the fishers near at hand Distinctly speak, yet not see where they stand ; Or sometimes them and not their boat discern, Or half-conceal'd some figure... | |
| René Louis Huchon - 1907 - 596 pages
...urged solely by the tide. In winter the observer may suddenly find himself wrapped in a dense fog: When you can hear the fishers near at hand Distinctly speak, yet not see where they stand ; Or sometimes them and not their boat discern, Or half-conceal'd some figure... | |
| George Crabbe - 1914 - 664 pages
...walk and gaze On weeds that sparkle, and on waves that blaze. 4 The ocean too has winter-views serene, When all you see through densest fog is seen ; When...where they stand ; Or sometimes them and not their boat discern, Or half-conceal'd some figure at the stern ; The view's all bounded, and from side to... | |
| Edward Thomas - 1917 - 398 pages
...earlier poems only occasionally, in a passage like this : " The ocean, too, has winter views serene, When all you see through densest fog is seen ; When...where they stand ; Or sometimes them and not their boat discern, Or half couceal'd some figure at the stern ; The view's all bounded, and from side to... | |
| 1810 - 538 pages
...form» of all. ' p. 249—2J1. The following picture of a calm sea fog, is by the same powerful hand. * When all you see through densest fog is seen ; When...hear the fishers near at hand Distinctly speak, yet sec not where they stand ; Or sometimes them and not their boat discern, Or half-conceal'd some figure... | |
| Samuel Longfellow - 2004 - 445 pages
...most like his descriptions of the sea, for instance, the winter sea-scene in ‘The Borough,” — When you can hear the fishers, near at hand, Distinctly speak, yet see not where they stand. 1 From Aft$. Basil Montague to Uharles Suniner. LONDON, March, 1848 I have infected my husband and... | |
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