| Charles Dexter Cleveland - 1853 - 800 páginas
...thou art there. THE HOMES OF ENGLAND. The stately Homes of England, How beautiful they stand, Araiilst their tall ancestral trees, O'er all the pleasant...sunny gleam, And the swan glides past them with the Bound Of some rejoicing stream. The merry Homes of England ! Around their hearths by night, What gladsome... | |
| English poetry - 1853 - 552 páginas
...line, arid we raised not a stone — But we left him alone with his glory. WOLFE. THE HOMES OF ENGLAND. THE stately homes of England, How beautiful they stand...O'er all the pleasant land ! The deer across their green sward bound Through shade and sunny gleam, And the swan glides past them with the sound Of some... | |
| Mrs. Hemans - 1853 - 420 páginas
...moan — " My brother ! oh ! my brother ! best and bravest ! thou art gone ! " THE HOMES OF ENGLAND. THE stately homes of England, How beautiful they stand...trees, O'er all the pleasant land. The deer across then greensward bound, Through shade and sunny gleam, And the swan glides past them with the sound... | |
| Mrs. Hemans - 1853 - 596 páginas
...such a land 7" — Marmion, THE stately Homes of England, How beautiful they stand ! Amidst their tail ancestral trees, O'er all the pleasant land. The deer...their greensward bound, Through shade and sunny gleam, 1 And the swan glides past them with the sound Of some rejoicing stream. The merry Homes of England... | |
| W H Cordeaux - 1853 - 118 páginas
...unassuming and plain deportment conceals frequently great and glorious powers. THE HOMES OP ENGLAND. The stately homes of England, How beautiful they stand ! Amidst their tall ancestral W trees, O'er all the pleasant land ! The Deer across their green sward bound, Through shade and sunny... | |
| Eliza Rooke - 1854 - 200 páginas
...complete their happiness in the way most congenial to their own sentiments." 130 DOUBLY POOR. CHAPTER XXX. "The stately homes of England, How beautiful they...tall, ancestral trees, O'er all the pleasant land." "MR. SOBER seems a very quiet, respectable man," said Alfred to Mrs. Lockyer. " I met him in our readingroom... | |
| Mrs. Hemans - 1855 - 620 páginas
...ancestral tree*, They sat at their feast round the Norse-king's O'er all the pleasant land. board, The deer across their greensward bound Through shade...past them with the sound Of some rejoicing stream. By the glare of the torch-light the mead was poured, The hearth was heaped with the pine-boughs high,... | |
| Mrs. Hemans - 1855 - 420 páginas
...moan — " My brother ! oh ! my brother ! best and bravest ! thou art gone ! " THE HOMES OF ENGLAND. THE stately homes of England, How beautiful they stand...trees, O'er all the pleasant land. The deer across then greensward bound, Through shade and sunny gleam, And the swan glides past them with the sound... | |
| John Dennis - 1855 - 256 páginas
...equal share in a fair and noble province of letters." THE DEEPDENE. The stately homes of England 1 How beautiful they stand, Amidst their tall ancestral trees, O'er all the pleasant land 1 MBS. HBUANS. " Who has not heard of the Deepdene, a princely pile, combining Art's Museum with the... | |
| Thomas Rose (topographical writer.) - 1856 - 278 páginas
...ne'er visits their obscure retreats, Nor when he runs his course, nor when he sets." RABY CASTLE. " The stately homes of England, How beautiful they stand...and sunny gleam ; And the swan glides past them with a sound Of some rejoicing stream." MRS. HEMANS. RABY CASTLE, situated within the parish of Staindrop,... | |
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