| Ralph Waldo Emerson - Calendars - 1905 - 138 pages
...the next age. CIRCLES JULY THIRD We buy ashes for bread, We buy diluted wine; Give me of the true, Whose ample leaves and tendrils curled Among the silver hills of heaven, Draw everlasting dew. The power of manners is incessant, — an element as unconcealable as fire. The nobility cannot in... | |
| Helen Maria Winslow - Women - 1905 - 220 pages
...must first love all the world." "We buy ashes for bread; We buy diluted wine ; Give me the tree — Whose ample leaves and tendrils curled Among the silver hills of heaven, Draw everlasting dew." A few years ago Mr. Trine took occasion to send out to his friends a little card with the following... | |
| Ralph Waldo Emerson - 1908 - 218 pages
...ashes for bread, We buy diluted wine; Give me of the true, Whose ample leaves and tendrils curled 15 Among the silver hills of heaven, Draw everlasting...of the world. Form of forms and mould of statures, 20 That I, intoxicated, And by the draught assimilated, May float at pleasure through all natures,... | |
| Poetry - 1912 - 440 pages
...craft, to a more rich delight. We buy ashes for bread; We buy diluted wine; Give me of the true, — Whose ample leaves and tendrils curled Among the silver...Wine of wine, Blood of the world, Form of forms, and mold of statures, That I intoxicated, And by the draught assimilated, May float at pleasure through... | |
| Robert Milton Howard - Georgia - 1912 - 376 pages
...heen, I hold." FINIS. "We buy ashes for bread, We buy diluted wine; Qlve me the tree— Whose am pie leaves and tendrils curled Among the silver hills of Heaven, Draw everlasting dew." "Full many a gem of purest ray serene, The dark, unfathomed cares of ocean bear; Full many a flower... | |
| Ralph Waldo Emerson - 1921 - 580 pages
...He chants an ode to Bacchus, calling for Wine of wine, Blood of the world, Form of forms, and mold of statures, That I intoxicated And by the draught...assimilated, May float at pleasure through all natures. Under the heading "Morals" in his discourse on "Poetry and Imagination," he comes to the conclusion,... | |
| Stuart Pratt Sherman - American literature - 1922 - 360 pages
...under ten headings of the technique of exaltation, of ecstasy. He chants an ode to Bacchus, calling for Wine of wine, Blood of the world, Form of forms, and...assimilated, May float at pleasure through all natures. Under the heading "Morals" in his discourse on "Poetry and Imagination," he comes to the conclusion,... | |
| Richard Le Gallienne - American poetry - 1925 - 448 pages
...craft, to a more rich delight. We buy ashes for bread ; We buy diluted wine; Give me of the true, — Whose ample leaves and tendrils curled Among the silver...Wine of wine, Blood of the world, Form of forms, and mold of statures, That I intoxicated, And by the draught assimilated, May float at pleasure through... | |
| Nora Archibald Smith - Women authors - 1925 - 428 pages
...will give it here, for this magic is of a kind that is never exhausted, but is like the true wine — 'Whose ample leaves and tendrils curled Among the silver hills of heaven Draw everlasting dew.' It may be, if given here complete, that the words will again fall into good ground and bear fruit abundantly,... | |
| Nora Archibald Smith - Children's literature, American - 1925 - 430 pages
...give it here, for this magic is of a kind that is never exhausted, but is like the true wine — ' Whose ample leaves and tendrils curled Among the silver hills of heaven Draw everlasting dew.' It may be, if given here complete, that the words will again fall into good ground and bear fruit abundantly,... | |
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