Maud and Other PoemsMethuen, 1899 - 124 |
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Strona 7
... is fatter game on the moor ; she will let me alone . Thanks , for the fiend best knows whether woman or man be the worse . I will bury myself in my books , and the Devil may pipe to his own . II LONG have I sigh'd for a calm : God MAUD 7.
... is fatter game on the moor ; she will let me alone . Thanks , for the fiend best knows whether woman or man be the worse . I will bury myself in my books , and the Devil may pipe to his own . II LONG have I sigh'd for a calm : God MAUD 7.
Strona 48
... owe this debt to you And for your sweet sake to yours ; O then , what then shall I say If ever I should forget , ? - May God make me more wretched Than ever I have been yet ! ΙΟ So now I have sworn to bury All this 48 MAUD.
... owe this debt to you And for your sweet sake to yours ; O then , what then shall I say If ever I should forget , ? - May God make me more wretched Than ever I have been yet ! ΙΟ So now I have sworn to bury All this 48 MAUD.
Strona 49
Alfred Tennyson Baron Tennyson. ΙΟ So now I have sworn to bury All this dead body of hate , I feel so free and so clear By the loss of that dead weight , That I should grow light - headed , I fear , Fantastically merry ; But that her ...
Alfred Tennyson Baron Tennyson. ΙΟ So now I have sworn to bury All this dead body of hate , I feel so free and so clear By the loss of that dead weight , That I should grow light - headed , I fear , Fantastically merry ; But that her ...
Strona 70
... then to hear a dead man chatter Is enough to drive one mad . 2 Wretchedest age , since Time began , They cannot even bury a man ; And tho ' we paid our tithes in the days that are gone , Not a bell was rung , not a prayer was 70 MAUD.
... then to hear a dead man chatter Is enough to drive one mad . 2 Wretchedest age , since Time began , They cannot even bury a man ; And tho ' we paid our tithes in the days that are gone , Not a bell was rung , not a prayer was 70 MAUD.
Strona 74
... bury me , bury me Deeper , ever so little deeper.1 1 These stanzas display that morbid feeling closely related to insanity , which jumbles up the sensations of the living with the circumstances peculiar to death . Of this kind of ...
... bury me , bury me Deeper , ever so little deeper.1 1 These stanzas display that morbid feeling closely related to insanity , which jumbles up the sensations of the living with the circumstances peculiar to death . Of this kind of ...
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1st edition reads ALFRED LORD TENNYSON Arabian night army babble battle beat beautiful blood bow'd bright brook brother Brunelleschi bury Cannon cold crown dark dead dear Death delight dream DUKE OF WELLINGTON eagle earth echo ELIZABETH WORDSWORTH evil eyes F. D. MAURICE father feet flash'd flow To join French garden gloom glory gone grave half Hall hand happy head hear heart hero honour horses Idylls Isle of Wight join the brimming Katie Lamech land Light Brigade lilies Lincolnshire lines Lombard look'd lord Maud Maud's lover meadow mind night noble o'er passionate peace Pentagram people's voice poem poison'd poor rings Romeo and Juliet rose Rosy seem'd shell Shining daffodil sighs silent smile stanzas stood sweet Tennyson's thee Their's thine things thou thought thro told true vext Waterloo weep Wellington wood ΙΟ