| Mrs. Elizabeth Sophia (Fletcher) Watson - 1892 - 304 páginas
...what we never saw. " The day is dark and the night To him that would search their heart ; ***** Only, gazing alone, To him wild shadows are shown, Deep...height above unknown height. Still we say as we go — 4 Strange to think by the way, Whatever there is to know That shall we know one day.' " II XX.... | |
| George Gilfillan, Robert A. Watson, Elizabeth S. Watson - 1892 - 498 páginas
...slain, And peace that grinds them as grain, And eyes fixed ever in vain, On the pitiless eyes of Fate. Still we say as we go, ' Strange to think by the way, Whatever there is to know, That shall we know some day.' " The greatest genius rises above that, above the zone of storm ; but Gilfillan was always... | |
| Vida Dutton Scudder - 1895 - 368 páginas
...that would search their heart, No lips of cloud that will part, Nor morning song in the light: Only, gazing alone. To him wild shadows are shown, Deep...unknown height. Still we say as we go, Strange to think hy the way, Whatever there is to know That shall we know one day. " The past is over and fled, Named... | |
| Vida Dutton Scudder - 1895 - 368 páginas
...they be, Or whether as bond or free, Or whether they too were we, Or by what spell they were sped, Still we say as we go, ' Strange to think by the way...Whatever there is to know That shall we know one day.' i " The sky leans dumb on the sea Aweary with all its wings — And oh ! the song the sea sings Is... | |
| Vida Dutton Scudder - 1895 - 368 páginas
...forgot, Our present is and is not, Our future 'sa sealed seed-plot, And what betwixt them are we ? We who say as we go, ' Strange to think by the way, Whatever there is to know, That shall we know one day." * Sometimes, as in "Soothsay," or in the sonnet "Last Days," an unaccustomed ethical note, stern, sad,... | |
| 1895 - 536 páginas
...or free Or whether they too were we, Or by what spell they have sped. Still we say as we go, — 1 Strange to think by the way Whatever there is to know That shall we know one day.' Janus Ashcroft Noble. A REMINISCENCE. We gathered daffodils beside the sea This day last year. Ah !... | |
| Samuel Silas Curry - 1895 - 316 páginas
...that would search their heart, no lips of cloud that will part, nor morning song in the light: only, gazing alone, to him wild shadows are shown, deep...under deep unknown, and height above unknown height. . . . The sky leans dumb on the sea aweary with all its wings — and oh ! the song the sea sings is... | |
| Vida Dutton Scudder - 1895 - 364 páginas
...that would search their heart, No lips of cloud that will part, Nor morning song in the light : Only, gazing alone. To him wild shadows are shown, Deep under deep unknown, And height ahove unknown height. Still we say as we go, Strange to think hy the way, Whatever there is to know... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1896 - 632 páginas
...pain or pleasure. Snch is the theory conjectured here.' The refrain of this beautiful lyric is — ' Still we say as we go, " Strange to think by the way,...Whatever there is to know That shall we know one day " ' ; and it contains a hope which is not bred of Atheism, nor of that colder dogma which calls itself... | |
| 1896 - 842 páginas
...wrested from the grave when two souls were as intimately connected as were his and that of his dead wife. Still we say, as we go, Strange to think by the way. Whatever there is to know. That we shall know one day. FORI) M. HtrEFFER. From The New Bevi«w. A NOBLE LADY. lt has been recently... | |
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