| Edmund Clarence Stedman - 1887 - 566 páginas
...passage such as this may be taken, to show a dissatisfaction with his mission and the time : — " Who can see the green Earth any more As she was by the sources of Time ? Who imagine her fields as they lay In the sunshine, unworn by the plough ? Who thinks as they thought,... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1889 - 258 páginas
...Only the tract where he sails He wots of; only the thoughts, Raised by the objects he passes, are his. Who can see the green earth any more As she was by...fields as they lay In the sunshine, unworn by the plough ? Who thinks as they thought, The tribes who then roam'd on her breast, Her vigorous, primitive... | |
| Elisha Benjamin Andrews - 1892 - 468 páginas
...the present time. Men were less in danger morally from any form of social habit than they are to-day. "Who can see the green earth any more As she was by...fields as they lay In the sunshine, unworn by the plough ? Who thinks as they thought, The tribes who then roamed on her breast, Her vigorous, primitive... | |
| Joseph Jackson - 1894 - 390 páginas
...What you are, root and all, and all in all, I should know what God and man is." THE AUGUST FIELDS. Who can see the green earth any more As she was by...fields as they lay In the sunshine, unworn by the plough? Who thinks as they thought, The tribes who then roam'd on her breast, Her vigorous, primitive... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1895 - 540 páginas
...tract where he sails He wots of; only the thoughts, .j • Raised by the objects he passes, are his. Who can see the green earth any more As she was by...fields as they lay In the sunshine, unworn by the plough? Who thinks as they thought, The tribes who then roam'd on her breast, Her vigorous, primitive... | |
| Zénaïde Alexeïevna Ragozin - 1895 - 496 páginas
...though it assuredly beseems all this peerless portion of our habitable earth. CHAPTER II. THE ARYAS. " Who can see the green earth any more As she was by the sources of Time ? Who imagines her fields as she lay In the sunshine unworn by the plough ? Wrho thinks as they thought, The tribes who then roamed... | |
| Marian Roalfe Cox - 1895 - 362 páginas
...by the sources of Time ? Who imagines her fields as they lay In the sunshine, unworn by the plough ? Who thinks as they thought, The tribes who then roamed on her breast, Her vigorous, primitive sons?" — MATTHEW ARNOLD. The beginnings of Folk-lore — How the belief in a second self, or soul, may have... | |
| Zénaïde Alexeïevna Ragozin - 1895 - 502 páginas
...by the sources of Time ? ' Who imagines her fields as she lay In the sunshine unworn by the plough ? Who thinks as they thought, The tribes who then roamed on her breast, Her vigorous, primitive sons ? " MATTHEW ARNOLD, from The Future. I. IN a work which undertakes to present, in a set of parallel... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1896 - 380 páginas
...Only the tract where he sails He wots of: only the thoughts, Rais'd by the objects he passes, are his. Who can see the green Earth any more As she was by...fields as they lay In the sunshine, unworn by the plough ? Who thinks as they thought, The tribes who then liv'd on her breast, Her vigorous primitive... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1897 - 546 páginas
...by the sources of Time ? Who imagines her fields as they lay In the sunshine, unworn by the plough ? Who thinks as they thought, The tribes who then roamed on her breast, Her vigorous, primitive sons ? What girl Now reads in her bosom as clear As Rebekah read, when she sate At eve by the palm-shaded... | |
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