| Ada Woodruff Anderson - 1909 - 340 oldal
...strings, and while she sang she looked with laughing, mocking eyes straight in her listener's face. " With all my soul then let us part, Since both are...And I will send you home your heart If you will send mine back to me. " We've had some happy hours together, But joy is ever on the wing, — " Haworth... | |
| Friedrich Wilhelm Gesenius - 1909 - 212 oldal
...(Milton). — I cannot but (id) fann ntdfjt anber§ af§ . . ., id) mufj) believe what you say. — Spring would be but gloomy weather, if we had nothing else but spring (Moore). *) Anglo-Saxon butan = aujjen, aufjer. Compare the Low -German Note. After other, no other,... | |
| Ida Luella Rettinghouse Lyon - 1910 - 250 oldal
...depends for its very existence upon change. Thomas Moore gracefully expressed this truth in saying: "We've had some happy hours together, But joy must...gloomy weather If we had nothing else but spring." Consciousness has been appropriately called the window of mind, through which it looks out upon, and... | |
| Henry George Bohn - 1911 - 784 oldal
...from thee As hell from heaven, to all eternity. 3721 Moore : Lalla Rookh. Veiled Prophet of Ifhorassan 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 s * i PASSION — sen Choler, Hobbles, Independence. Take heed lest... | |
| James Anthony Froude, John Tulloch - 1873 - 800 oldal
...fancying that many a love match would end within a year or two by the young couple humming in unison : With all my soul, then, let us part, Since both are...your heart If you will send back mine to me. We've Juni some happy hours together, Lut j..y must often change Wvs mng -, Ami spring would be but gloomy... | |
| Miss Pardoe (Julia) - 186? - 364 oldal
...than either yon or I,) said or sang with a philosophy which you would do well to imitate, that " ' Spring would be but gloomy weather, If we had nothing else but Spring.' " Let us wait then for the birds, bees, and butterflies of that sweet coming season. Let us wait; we... | |
| Ferdinand Eugene Daniel - 1896 - 906 oldal
...If we had no hard times and privations, we could not appreciate prosperity; and "spring," you know, "would be but gloomy weather, if we had nothing else but spring." So, as it often happens that a disappointment is a blessing in disguise, and often turns out to be... | |
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