A Record of the Pyramids: A Drama in Ten ScenesSaunders and Otley, 1842 - 156 Seiten |
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Seite xxiii
... hear the Bible ? and do we not daily hear and see that the greater part of them understand and are thrilled with the transcend- ent images within , being unaware that it is poetry of the sublimest order ? Nothing of homeliness or ...
... hear the Bible ? and do we not daily hear and see that the greater part of them understand and are thrilled with the transcend- ent images within , being unaware that it is poetry of the sublimest order ? Nothing of homeliness or ...
Seite xxiv
... hears in them awful truths , stamped upon his sluggish memory in illustrative and powerful language . Thus , then , -following the train of thought to which these reflections lead us , however far removed be the era in which the poet ...
... hears in them awful truths , stamped upon his sluggish memory in illustrative and powerful language . Thus , then , -following the train of thought to which these reflections lead us , however far removed be the era in which the poet ...
Seite 7
... hear me : I fear thee not : it is thy solitude Hath made thee savage ; man embrutes alone . Look at this desolate cavern , thy abode . PROMETHEUS . What ? have not I a palace , too ? Compare Our state - his tinsel royalties with mine ...
... hear me : I fear thee not : it is thy solitude Hath made thee savage ; man embrutes alone . Look at this desolate cavern , thy abode . PROMETHEUS . What ? have not I a palace , too ? Compare Our state - his tinsel royalties with mine ...
Seite 10
... hear nought : Day sinks and rises o'er that sullen city In dull , unmarked progression ; -when the sun Scorches all life to cover , I still see Those human shoals driven on to their loathed task With lash and steel , and life still ...
... hear nought : Day sinks and rises o'er that sullen city In dull , unmarked progression ; -when the sun Scorches all life to cover , I still see Those human shoals driven on to their loathed task With lash and steel , and life still ...
Seite 13
... hear The offspring of distempered appetite ! EPIMETHEUS . Hear ! He beheld the Pyramid completed ; Its height touched heaven ; he sat throned upon The loftiest of them , crowned , and watched the stars ; For his mind ever seeks futurity ...
... hear The offspring of distempered appetite ! EPIMETHEUS . Hear ! He beheld the Pyramid completed ; Its height touched heaven ; he sat throned upon The loftiest of them , crowned , and watched the stars ; For his mind ever seeks futurity ...
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A Record of the Pyramids: A Drama, in Ten Scenes (Classic Reprint) John Edmund Reade Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2018 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
altar Amasis BABYLONIAN bear beautiful Behold beneath blessed bosom breath brow Cambyses CATILINE chains CHIEF HIEROPHANT CHIEF PREFECT crown crushed dared death deeds descend divinity Dost thou doth Drama dream dwell earth Egypt EGYPTIAN embruted EPIMETHEUS eternal eyes falchion fear feel fellow-men felt fire flame forgot freedom gather glory gods guard hands hath hear heard heart heaven Herodotus honour hope human immortal infinite inspiration John Gorham Palfrey justice king labour lake Liberty light LILIS living mankind MEMPHIAN Memphis mighty hearts mind Moris MULTITUDE Nature Nature's never Nile NUBIAN o'er Osiris passions PHOENICIAN Plato Plotinus Poem poet priests PROMETHEUS pure Pyramids records rise round ruins says SCENE SEGED sense shew shrine silent slavery slaves sleep soul spirit Spiritus intus alit stand strength sublime temple Thebes thee thine thou art thou dost thou hast thought throne truth tyranny tyrants voice Voices of prophecy wind worship
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 49 - Heaven doth with us as we with torches do; Not light them for themselves: for, if our virtues Did not go forth of us, 'twere all alike
Seite 103 - perils did abound As thick as thought could make them, and appear In forms more horrid, yet my duty, As doth a rock against the chiding flood. Should the approach of this wild river break, And stand
Seite 67 - full meridian of my glory I haste DOW to my setting. I shall fall Like a bright exhalation in the evening. And no man see me more.
Seite 91 - It were all one That I should love a bright particular star. And think to wed it, he is so above me: In
Seite 15 - It is the mind that makes the body rich ; And, as the sun breaks through the darkest cloud, So honour peereth in the meanest habit.
Seite xxv - GOD hath made all things beautiful in their seasons ; also, He hath placed the world in man's heart: yet cannot man find out the work which GOD worketh from the beginning to the end.
Seite 37 - Wilt thou draw near the nature of the gods ? Draw near them, then, in being merciful; Sweet mercy is nobility's true badge
Seite 103 - of beatun brass, Nor airless dungeon, nor strong links of iron. Can be retentive to the strength of spirit!"
Seite 121 - using, as vehicles, every species of terrestrial, winged, and aquatic animals, it finally enters, a second time, into the human body. They affirm that it undergoes all these changes in the space of three thousand years.
Seite 126 - west," behind; "south," the right; and " the north," obscure, or concealed. The three first of these terms denote the position of an adorer of the sun; the last describes the darkness with which the first inhabitants of the earth believed the northern part of the globe to be enveloped.