 | Walter Aimwell - American literature - 1867 - 268 pages
...thy heart feels nearest heaven, Then thy angel babe is there ! MBS. EMILY JUDSON THE OPEN WINDOW. THK 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... | |
 | Robert Hall Baynes - 1880 - 674 pages
...now, without further introduction, again make their acquaintance. CHAPTER VIII. " I saw the nnrsery windows Wide open to the air ! But the faces of the children, They were no longer there. " Oh, not in cruelty, not in wrath, The Reaper came that day, Twas an angel visited the green earth,... | |
 | Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - American poetry - 1867 - 482 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 gravelled pathway I'he light and shadow played. I saw the nursery windows Wide open to the air ; But the faces of the... | |
 | John Rolfe - 1867 - 404 pages
...thy crags, O Sea ! But the tender grace of a day that is dead, Will never come back to me. TENNYSOV. THE old house by the lindens Stood silent in the shade, And on the gravell'd pathway The light and shadow played. 1 saw the nursery windows Wide open to the air ! But... | |
 | Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 1868 - 246 pages
...onr world of night, With the umrumring sonnd of rhyme. THE OPEN WINDOW THE old honse hy the lindeus Stood silent in the shade. And on the gravelled pathway The light and shadow played. I saw the unrsery windows Wide open to the air: Bnt the faees of the ehildren, They were no longer there. . The... | |
 | Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 1870 - 642 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,...faces of the children, They were no longer there. The large Newfoundland housedog Was standing by the door; He looked for his little playmates, Who would... | |
 | Photography - 1894 - 572 pages
...vivid and your picture is clear in your mind's eye, yet you lack the words to unlock your thoughts. " The old house by the lindens, Stood silent in the...the gravelled pathway, The light and shadow played." — 14. Or perhaps it is out beyond the homestead, and you recall the time when, for the last time,... | |
 | 1871 - 304 pages
...vast plain, And one boundless reach of sky. THE OPEN WINDOW. ' I ''JHhi old house by the lindens _L Stood silent in the shade, And on the gravelled pathway...Wide open to the air ; But the faces of the children, The large Newfoundland house-dog Was standing by the door ; He looked for his little playmates, Who... | |
 | Jarrold and sons, ltd - 1872 - 198 pages
...swept up, and set in order. XXI.— THE OPEN WINDOW. Lindens— lime trees. \ Familiar— well known. 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... | |
 | John William Stanhope Hows - Elocution - 1872 - 322 pages
...were taught by an angel, and were so very happy ?" "I do believe so!" THE OPEN 'WINDOW— LONSFELLOW. 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 ; They walked not under the lindens, They... | |
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