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"sorry? of course you are, though you compress, | 2 |
i would not live alway | 2 |
the king ordains their entrance, and ascends | 1 |
very sleepy with the silence. | 2 |
which clanged along the mountain's marble brow-- | 2 |
it steam in winter like an ox's breath, | 2 |
in prosperous days. like a dim, waning lamp | 3 |
jarr'd his own golden region; and before | 2 |
flood his black hearthstone till its flames expire, | 0 |
when high i heap it with the weed | 2 |
the climax of those hopes and duties dear | 1 |
wait his returning strength. | 2 |
strove to raise itself in blessing, | 1 |
nile shall pursue his changeless way: | 2 |
i must be home by noon-time with the cart.' | 2 |
both the unseen and the seen; | 2 |
the poet comes the last! | 2 |
with many sighs; | 2 |
where, all the long and lone daylight, | 2 |
full of the calm that cometh after sleep: | 1 |
men said, into a smile which guile portended, | 0 |
still sigurd rides with the brethren, as oft in the other days, | 2 |
was she not somewhat that he could not rule | 2 |
gnossian his shafts, and lycian was his bow: | 2 |
you didn't stop for fuss,-- | 2 |
deaf, and dumb, and blind, and cold, | 0 |
i'm here--so far--and starting on again. | 2 |
a different man was brother timothy, | 2 |
see! neptune’s altars minister their brands: | 2 |
to match your wit against the maker's will, | 2 |
absently fingering and touching it, | 2 |
three hours the first november dawn | 2 |
ran ever clearer speech than that did run | 1 |
"i say it's someone passing." | 2 |
the visual nerve is withered to the root, | 0 |
"what hope wouldst thou hope, o sigurd, ere we kiss, we twain, and depart?" | 3 |
there is nothing to hope for, i am tired, | 0 |
i left the place with all my might, -- | 2 |
let dat cradle swing, | 2 |
he has no calling and he owns no trade. | 2 |
as they were loosened by that hermit old, | 2 |
then rose they up around him, | 2 |
but because she stept to her star right on through death | 3 |
an' see a hundred hills like islan's | 2 |
and i am still the same; | 2 |
misnames as the dog rosey now. | 2 |
have seen the danger which i dared not look | 0 |
and hoping chink, she talked of morts of luck: | 2 |
the meadows mine, the mountains mine, -- | 2 |
since ferdinand and you begun | 2 |
i'm always thinkin' long. | 2 |
ho! philip, send, for charity, thy mexican pistoles, | 2 |
on to their shining goals:-- | 1 |
glory might burst on us! | 1 |
what's de use o' gittin' mopy, | 2 |
yet by experience taught we know how good, | 2 |
all foredoomed to melt away; | 0 |
as if she were a woman. we who have clipt | 2 |
it would be different if more people came, | 2 |
plucked from the death, wilt thou repay me thus? | 3 |
a spirit of unresting flame, | 1 |
the present is enough, for common souls, | 2 |
hear its low inward singing, | 2 |
be sure to read it rightly. so, i mused | 2 |
and keep my senses straightened | 2 |
three trojans tug at ev’ry lab’ring oar; | 2 |
mind us of like repose, since god hath set | 2 |
lift their blue woods in broken chain | 2 |
in nothing is wanting; | 2 |
but thrown in a heap with a crush and a clatter; | 0 |
and kissed him with a sister's kiss, | 2 |
"thou of the god-lent crown, | 2 |
like pageantry of mist on an autumnal stream. | 2 |
and she said: "what dost thou, brynhild? what matter dost thou seek?" | 2 |
or the bolder art essaying | 2 |
thither, if but to prie, shall be perhaps | 2 |
o'er sweet profounds where only love can see. | 1 |
he smell de bacon cookin', an' he hyeah de fiah hum; | 2 |
came in slow pomp;--the moving pomp might seem | 2 |
with peace and soft rapture shall teach life to glow, | 1 |
but thy tranquil waters teach | 1 |
smoothing the clustered hair, and parting it | 2 |
in all that clang and hewing out of men, | 2 |
her scutcheon shows white with a blazon of red,-- | 2 |
looks, and is dumb with awe; | 3 |
then oer the rushes flies again, | 2 |
a thousand rubs had flattened down each little cherub's nose, | 2 |
a fragrance from the cedars, thickly set | 2 |
of bright and dark obscurity; | 3 |
science and song, and all the arts that please; | 1 |
you turn, o jeanne, on our mystery | 2 |
a graciousness in giving that doth make | 1 |
most beauteous isadore! | 1 |
whose instinct was to listen and obey. | 2 |
but homesick tears would fill the eyes | 0 |
already, land! thou hast declared: 'tis done. | 1 |
with war unhop’d the latians to surprise? | 2 |
the eyes beside had wrung them dry, | 2 |
tis the chronicle of art. | 2 |
that moved in the beginning o'er his face, | 2 |
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