 | Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 1854 - 472 pages
...realms of light It falls into our world of night, With the murmuring sound of rhyme. THE OPEN WINDOW. THE old house by the lindens Stood silent in the shade,...saw the nursery windows Wide open to the air ; But ttfe faces of the children, They were no longer there. The large Newfoundland house-dog Was standing... | |
 | Ludwig Herrig - American literature - 1854 - 580 pages
...unhroke; And the song, frorn beginning to end, I fonnd again the heart of a friend. THE OFEN WINDOW. THE old house by the lindens Stood silent in the shade,...pathway The light and shadow played. I saw the nursery window Wide open to the air; But the faces of the children They were no longer there. The large Newfoundland... | |
 | Elizabeth Caroline Grey - 1854 - 498 pages
...sounds. sounds in vain. Oh! when again will children's voices echo in those silent halls ? " ' I see the nursery windows Wide open to the air, But the faces of the children They are no longer there." " ' They walk not under the Lindens, They play not in the hall ; And shadow,... | |
 | Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 1855 - 264 pages
...the cry Of souls, that high On toiling, beating pinions fly, Seeking a warmer clime. THE OPEN WINDOW. THE old house by the lindens Stood silent in the shade,...faces of the children, They were no longer there. The large Newfoundland house-dog Was standing by the door ; He looked for his little playmates, Who... | |
 | English language - 1855 - 172 pages
...THE HOUSEHOLD. THE death- of children in early life is a sad event; the blight of buds of promise. " I SAW the nursery windows "Wide open to the air; But...faces of the children, They were no longer there." LONGFELLOW. WED, to pledge love; to unite in WORK, what is done by effort; labor marriage. of any kind.... | |
 | Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 1855 - 578 pages
...realms of light, It falls into our world of night With the murmuring sound of rhyme. THE OPEN WINDOW. THE old house by the lindens Stood silent in the shade, And on the gravell'd pathway The light and shadow played. I saw the nursery windows Wide open to the air ! But... | |
 | Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 1855 - 472 pages
...flight Through realms of light, It falls into our world of night 40C BY THE FIRESIDE. THE OPEN WINDOW. THE old house by the lindens Stood silent in the shade, And on the gravell'd pathway The light and shadow played. I saw the nursery windows Wide open to the air ! But... | |
 | Mary Russell Mitford - Authors - 1855 - 580 pages
...crevice, as a floweret of the soil, The nobility of labor, the long pedigree of toil. THE OPEN WINDOW. The old house by the lindens Stood silent in the shade, And on the graveled pathway The light and shadow played. I saw the nursery window Wide open to the air; But the... | |
 | Reading book - 1856 - 352 pages
...we forgot pain and sorrow, and our hearts overflowed with thanskgiving." LESSON 43. THE OPEN WINDOW. THE old house by the lindens Stood silent in the shade,...faces of the children, They were no longer there. The large Newfoundland house-dog Was standing by the door ; He looked for his little playmates, Who... | |
 | Margaret Fraser Barbour - Children - 1856 - 406 pages
...on it when he wrote — The old house hy the lindens Stood silent in the shade, And on the gravell'd pathway The light and shadow played. I saw the nursery windows Wide open to the air I But the faces of the children, They were no longer there. The large Newfoundland house-dog Was standing... | |
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