| Love-knots - 1883 - 234 pages
...I'll think— and, as of old, You'll kiss me, and be friends. CHARLES MACKAY. Poetical Works. (Warne.) WITH all my soul, then, let us part, Since both are...gloomy weather, If we had nothing else but spring. 'Tis not that I expect to find A more devoted, fond, and true one, With rosier cheek or sweeter mind... | |
| Henry George Bohn - Quotations, English - 1883 - 782 pages
...from thee As hell from heaven, to all eternity. 3721 Moore : Lalla Rookh. Veiled Prophet of Khorassan With all my soul, then let us part, Since both are...home your heart, If you will send back mine to me ! 3722 Moore : Juvenile Poems. To * * * PASSION — see Choler, Hobbies, Independence. Take heed lest... | |
| Frederick Langbridge - 1883 - 438 pages
...I'll think— and, as of old, You'll kiss me, and be friends. CHARLES MACKAY. Poetical Works. (Warne.) WITH all my soul, then, let us part, Since both are anxious to be free ; We've had some happy hours together, But joy must often change its wing ; And spring would be but... | |
| Mayne Reid - 1889 - 344 pages
...can easily believe that a wise Providence has ordered it so. A poet who has sung sweetly says, that " Spring would be but gloomy weather, If we had nothing else but spring " ; and our own experience proclaims the truth conveyed in the distich. He who has lived in the tropical... | |
| Thomas Moore - English poetry - 1895 - 874 pages
...are anxious to be free; And I will send you home your heart, If you will send back mine to me. We 've had some happy hours together, But joy must often...nothing else but spring. 'T is not that I expect to find A more devoted, fond, and true one, With rosier cheek or sweeter mind — Enough for me that she... | |
| Thomas Moore - English poetry - 1895 - 838 pages
...to mine. I saw thy heart begin to melt, Like ice before the sun; Till both a glow congenial felt, TO WITH all my soul, then, let us part, Since both are...home your heart, If you will send back mine to me. We 've had some happy hours together, But joy must often change its wing; And spring would be but gloomy... | |
| Quotations, English - 1895 - 768 pages
...from heaven, to all eternity ! Moore, Lalla Bookti. With all my soul, then let us part, Since both arc anxious to be free ; And I will send you home your heart, If you will send back mine to me ! Moore. PASSION Choler, Hobbies, Independence. Take heed lest by your heat you burn yourselves. Sh.... | |
| Samuel Austin Allibone - Quotations, English - 1896 - 794 pages
...from the breaking heart, When two, blest in their tenderness, Must learn to live apart. LE LANDON. With all my soul, then, let us part, Since both are...home your heart, If you will send back mine to me. MOORE. Oh ! wherefore dost thou soothe me with th/ softness ? Why dost thou wind thyself about my heart,... | |
| Philip Hugh Dalbiac - Quotations, English - 1897 - 526 pages
...the leaf, the bloom, and the butterfly's wing, Making our earth a fairy home." ELIZA COOK. Spring. " Spring would be but gloomy weather, If we had nothing else but Spring." T. MOORE. Juvenile Poems. To " Squint-eyed Slander." BEATTIE. The Judgment of Paris. " Stand no' upon... | |
| Charles Hamilton Hughes - Neurology - 1901 - 862 pages
...heartless jollity of the play house. The two kinds of work diversify my life; I touch on two extremes. "Spring would be but gloomy weather If we had nothing else but spring." Long residents of California from eastern localities have told me they longed for alternating changes... | |
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