| Walter Savage Landor - Imaginary conversations - 1826 - 534 pages
...offered up in the churches to God. Happy the man, whose aspirations are pure enough to mingle with it! How many fond and how many lively thoughts have been nurtured under this tree I how many kind hearts have beaten here ! Its branches are not so numerous as the couples they have... | |
| Walter Savage Landor - English literature - 1846 - 618 pages
...offered up in the churches to God. Happy the man whose aspirations are pure enough to mingle with it ! How many fond and how many lively thoughts have been...invited to sit beside it, nor its blossoms and leaves as the expressions of tenderness it has witnessed. What appeals to the pure all-seeing heavens ! what... | |
| Walter Savage Landor - 1846 - 620 pages
...offered up in the churches to God. Happy the man whose aspirations are pure enough to mingle with it ! How many fond and how many lively thoughts have been...how many kind hearts have beaten here ! Its branches arc not so numerous as the couples they have invited to sit beside it, nor its blossoms and leaves... | |
| William Howitt - Literary landmarks - 1847 - 566 pages
...offered up in the churches of God. Happy the man whose aspirations are pure enough to mingle with it ! " How many fond, and how many lively thoughts have been nurtured under this very tree ! How many kind hearts have beaten here ! Its branches are not so numerous as the couples... | |
| George Lillie Craik - 1851 - 192 pages
...offered up in the churches to God. Happy the man whose aspirations are pure enough to mingle with it ! How many fond and how many lively thoughts have been...blossoms and leaves together as the expressions of ten* All books are written upon it in Ceylon. derness it has witnessed. What appeals to the pure all-seeing... | |
| Walter Savage Landor - 1856 - 346 pages
...offered up in the churches to God. Happy is the man whose aspirations are pure enough to mingle with it ! How many fond, and how many lively thoughts have been...invited to sit beside it, nor its blossoms and leaves as the expressions of tenderness it has witnessed. What appeals to the pure, all-seeing heavens ! what... | |
| Walter Savage Landor - 1876 - 646 pages
...offered up in the churches to God. Happy the man whose aspirations are pure enough to mingle with it ! How many fond and how many lively thoughts have been...invited to sit beside it, nor its blossoms and leaves as the expressions of tenderness it has witnessed. What appeals to the pure all-seeing heavens ! what... | |
| Sidney Colvin - 1881 - 250 pages
...fortresses and their armies, nay, sometimes their daughters, have not sold it : must it fall ? . . . " How many fond and how many lively thoughts have been...invited to sit beside it, nor its blossoms and leaves as the expressions of tenderness it has witnessed. What appeals to the pure all-seeing heavens ! what... | |
| Sidney Colvin - Authors, English - 1881 - 242 pages
...are not so numerous as the couples they have invited to sit beside it, nor its blossoms and leaves as the expressions of tenderness it has witnessed. What appeals to the pure all-seeing heavens! whatsimilitudestothe everlasting mountains ! what protestations of eternal truth and constancy from... | |
| Walter Savage Landor - Imaginary conversations - 1883 - 554 pages
...offered up in the churches to God. Happy the man whose aspirations are pure enough to mingle with it ! nurtured under this tree ! How many kind hearts have...invited to sit beside it, nor its blossoms and leaves as the expressions of tenderness it has witnessed. What appeals to the pure all-seeing heavens, what... | |
| |