Uprose the merry Sphinx, And crouched no more in stone; She melted into purple cloud, She silvered in the moon; She spired into a yellow flame; She flowered in blossoms red; She flowed into a foaming wave: She stood Monadnoc's head. Thorough a thousand... The Universalist Quarterly and General Review - Página 166editado por - 1847Visualização completa - Sobre este livro
| Ralph Waldo Emerson - 2007 - 329 páginas
...clothed eternity ; Time is the false reply.' 120 Uprose the merry Sphinx, And crouched no moro in atone ; She melted into purple cloud, She silvered in the...flowered in blossoms red ; She flowed into a foaming ware ; She stood Monadnoc's head. Thorough a thousand voices Spoke the universal dame : 130 'Who teEeth... | |
| Samuel Silas Curry - 1896 - 332 páginas
...ride, whate'er betide, until I find the Holy-Grail. " Sir Gala.had." Tennyson. IL SEQUENCE 0? IDEAS. UPROSE the merry Sphinx, and crouched no more in stone;...flowed into a foaming wave, she stood Monadnoc's head. - Emerson. study of nature shows that to develop expression, actions must be traced to their elements,... | |
| James McKeen Cattell - 1917 - 602 páginas
...confined to physics or chemistry, biology or psychology. For long ago the Sphinx crouched no longer in stone : She melted into purple cloud, She silvered...flowed into a foaming wave; She stood Monadnoc's head. Thoro a thousand voices Spoke the universal dame: "Who telleth one of my meanings, Is master of all... | |
| Henry Mills Alden, Frederick Lewis Allen, Lee Foster Hartman, Thomas Bucklin Wells - 1892 - 990 páginas
...Emerson's "Sphinx": " Uprose the merry Sphinx, And couched no more in stone ; She melted into purple cload, She silvered in the moon ; She spired into a yellow...blossoms red ; She flowed into a foaming wave; She stood Mouadnock's head." He talked long and earnestly upon the subject of our spiritual existence independent... | |
| 1897 - 946 páginas
...are not uncommon which hurt the reader and unfit him to proceed ; as, for example : — *' Thorough a thousand voices .Spoke the universal dame : ' Who telleth one of my meanings IK master of all I am.' " He himself has very well described the impression his verse is apt to make... | |
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