The Poetical Works of the Ettrick Shepherd: Including the Queen's Wake, Pilgrims of the Sun, Mador of the Moor, Mountain Bard, Etc., Etc. With an Autobiography, and Illustrative Engravings, from Original Drawings, Band 5Blackie and son, 1840 |
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Seite iii
... , The Guardian Angels , • Donald Macdonald , Where am I Gaun ? 34679CCH 14 SONGS . 21 22 23 C972 * 16 19 An Aged Widow's Lament , M'Kimman , Song of the Times of Charles First , Gin ye meet a Bonnie Lassie , Moggy and Me.
... , The Guardian Angels , • Donald Macdonald , Where am I Gaun ? 34679CCH 14 SONGS . 21 22 23 C972 * 16 19 An Aged Widow's Lament , M'Kimman , Song of the Times of Charles First , Gin ye meet a Bonnie Lassie , Moggy and Me.
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... meet a Bonnie Lassie , Moggy and Me , Rise ! Rise ! Lowland and Highland Men , Scotia's Glens , Lock the door , Lariston , The Bower of Tay , The Bittern's Quavering Trump on High , The Lassie of Yarrow , The Soldier's Widow , John of ...
... meet a Bonnie Lassie , Moggy and Me , Rise ! Rise ! Lowland and Highland Men , Scotia's Glens , Lock the door , Lariston , The Bower of Tay , The Bittern's Quavering Trump on High , The Lassie of Yarrow , The Soldier's Widow , John of ...
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... meet . They suffered me to want for nothing , either in money or clothes ; and I did not even need to ask these . Grieve was always the first to notice my wants , and prevent them . In short , they would not suffer me to be obliged to ...
... meet . They suffered me to want for nothing , either in money or clothes ; and I did not even need to ask these . Grieve was always the first to notice my wants , and prevent them . In short , they would not suffer me to be obliged to ...
Seite xlviii
... meet with the author ; but this I tried in vain , for the space of six months . All I could learn of him was , that he was a man from the mountains in Wales , or the West of England , with hair like eagles ' feathers , and nails like ...
... meet with the author ; but this I tried in vain , for the space of six months . All I could learn of him was , that he was a man from the mountains in Wales , or the West of England , with hair like eagles ' feathers , and nails like ...
Seite lxxiii
... meet the next day at Oman's Hotel , and celebrate its anniversary . We were dull and heavy when we met , but did not part so . We dined at five , and separated at two in the morning , before which time the club had risen greatly in our ...
... meet the next day at Oman's Hotel , and celebrate its anniversary . We were dull and heavy when we met , but did not part so . We dined at five , and separated at two in the morning , before which time the club had risen greatly in our ...
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The Poetical Works of the Ettrick Shepherd: Including the Queen's Wake ... Professor James Hogg Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2016 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
aboon amang anwother Balloch beauty Blackwood blithe blue bonnet bonny lassie braes braken brave breeze canna Charlie Charlie Stuart Clan Stuart claymore correi darling dear dear Mary dinna Donald M'Gillavry Ettrick farewell flower flowers of Scotland frae friends gallant gane Geordie glen gloaming green hast heart heaven Highland hill honour ilka kye comes hame laddie Lady land lass of Deloraine Lochaber look Lyttil Pynkie Maggy gangs Maid maiden mair Mary maun morning mountain myair naething ne'er never night nought o'er Oh-hon Old Mortality poem round sang Sassenach Scotland Scott shepherd sing sleep smile song soul spirit Stuarts of Appin sung sweet syangs tell thee There's thine thing thou art thought trepan Twommy wake wals weary weel Whig Whoy wild winna women fo'k young
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 58 - O'er moor and mountain green, O'er the red streamer that heralds the day, Over the cloudlet dim, Over the rainbow's rim, Musical cherub, soar, singing, away ! Then, when the gloaming comes, Low in the heather blooms Sweet will thy welcome and bed of love be ! Emblem of happiness, Blest is thy dwelling-place — Oh, to abide in the desert with thee ! JAMES HOGG.
Seite 57 - O to abide in the desert with thee ! Wild is thy lay and loud, Far in the downy cloud, Love gives it energy, love gave it birth. Where, on thy dewy wing, Where art thou journeying ? Thy lay is in heaven, thy love is on earth.
Seite 48 - Alas, pretty maiden, What sorrows attend you ! I see you sit shivering, With lights at your window; But long may you wait Ere your arms shall enclose him, For still, still he lies, With a wreath on his bosom ! " How painful the task The sad tidings to tell you ! — An orphan you were, Ere this misery befell you ; And far in yon wild, Where the dead-tapers hover, So cold, cold and wan, Lies the corpse of your lover !" Daughter of our soul ! would that from thy lips, and set to thine own music, the...
Seite xxi - My manner of composing poetry is very different, and, I believe, much more singular. Let the piece be of what length it will, I compose and correct it wholly in my mind, or on a slate, ere ever I put pen to paper; and then I write it down as fast as the A, B, C.
Seite 68 - Peter the skinman, An' Geordie our deacon, for want of a better, An Bess, wha delights in the sins that beset her. O, worthy St Andrew, we canna compel ye, But ye ken as weel as a body can tell ye, If these gang to heaven, we'll a' be sae shockit, Your garret o' blue will but thinly be stockit.
Seite xx - Whether my manner of writing it out was new, I know not, but it was not without singularity. Having very little spare time from my flock, which was unruly enough, I folded and stitched a few sheets of paper, which I carried in my pocket. I had no inkhorn ; but, in place of it...
Seite 87 - But oh, what will the lads do When Maggy gangs away? The wailing in our green glen That day will quaver high; 'Twill draw the redbreast frae the wood, The laverock frae the sky; The fairies frae their beds o' dew Will rise an' join the lay: An
Seite cxxvi - But the pleasantest part of our fellowship is yet to describe. At a certain period of the night our entertainer knew, by the longing looks which I cast to a beloved corner of the dining-room, what was wanting. Then, with 'Oh, I beg your pardon, Hogg, I was forgetting...
Seite 10 - Is it true that thou knewest me before I was born ? That nature must live in the light of thine eye? — This knowledge for me is too great and too high ! That, fly I to noon-day, or fly I to night, To shroud me in darkness, or bathe me in light, The light and the darkness to thee are the same, And still in thy presence of wonder I am ? Should I with the dove to the desert repair, Or dwell with the eagle in...
Seite 177 - FAKKV, i:ir, farewell, beggarly Scotland, Cold and beggarly poor countrie, If ever I cross thy border again, The muckle deil must carry me. There's but one tree in a' the land, And that's the bonny gallows tree.