| Thomas Carlyle - 1833 - 334 oldal
...edifice, stands Part first, entitled Wallenstein's Camp, a piece in one act. It paints, with much humor and graphical felicity, the manners of that rude tumultuous...like the wind's blast, never-resting, homeless, We stormed across the war-convulsed Earth. Still farther to soften the asperities of the scene, the dialogue... | |
| Charles Follen - 1837 - 326 oldal
...edifice, stands Part first, entitled Wallenstein' s Camp, a piece in one act. It paints, with much humor and graphical felicity, the manners of that rude tumultuous...like the wind's blast, never-resting, homeless, We stormed across the war-convulsed Earth. Still farther to soften the asperities of the scene, the dialogue... | |
| Charles Follen - 1837 - 322 oldal
...circuit of a single trench : violent, tempestuous, unstable is the life they lead. Ish» maelites, their hands against every man, and every man's hand...like the wind's blast, never-resting, homeless, We stormed across the war-convulsed Earth. Still farther to soften the asperities of the scene, the dialogue... | |
| Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 1839 - 234 oldal
...troubled times, in the rude and adverse fortunes of the state and age, and could say with Wallenstein, 'Our life was but a battle and a march; And, like the wind's blast, never-resting, homeless, We stormed across the war convulsed earth.' Of such examples history has recorded many ; Dante, Cervantes,... | |
| Thomas Carlyle - 1845 - 318 oldal
...contrive to wring from Fortune a tolerable scantling of enjoyment. Their manner of existence W allenstein has, at an after period of the action, rather movingly...dialogue is cast into a rude Hudibrastic metre, full I of forced rhymes, and strange double-endings, with a rhythm ever changing, ever rough and lively,... | |
| Kenelm Henry Digby - 1847 - 844 oldal
...Jeune, to tell him that some of his barons were but ravenous wolves let loose upon the land. " Their life was but a battle and a march, and, like the wind's blast, never resting, homeless, they stormed across the war-convulsed earth." Many kings of France were obliged... | |
| Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 1848 - 316 oldal
...times, in the rude and adverse fortunes of the state and age, and could say with Wallenstein,— ' Our life was but a battle and a march ; And, like the wind's blast, never resting, homeless, We stormed across the war-convulsed earth.' Of such examples history has recorded... | |
| Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 1851 - 376 oldal
...times, in the rude and adverse fortunes of the state and age, and could say with Wallenstein — ' Our life was but a battle and a march ; And, like the wind's blast, never-resting, homeless, We stormed across the war-convulsed earth.' Many such examples has history recorded; Dante, Cervantes,... | |
| Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 1856 - 404 oldal
...troubled times, in the rude and adverse fortunes of the state and age, and could say, with Wallenstein, ' Our life was but a battle and a march; And, like the wind's blast, never-resting, homeless, We stormed across the war-convulsed earth.' Many such examples has history recorded; Dante, Cervantes,... | |
| Thomas Carlyle - 1857 - 436 oldal
...and uncalculating obedience to their leader, their situation still presents some aspects which aflect or amuse us ; and these the poet has seized with his...And, like the wind's blast, never-resting, homeless, Wo storm'd across the war-convulsed Earth.' Still farther to soften the asperities of the scene, the... | |
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