| 1913 - 878 pages
...himself to a strange and stern path. The whole universe is, Indeed, linked In an Irrefragable unity, "That thou canst not stir a flower Without troubling of a star;" but the glory of the visible world Is Put by, in order that the spirit may live as though In Independence... | |
| Mary Mapes Dodge - 1914 - 800 pages
...the huckster's shop; the dreams of an artist who has taught English children of our time to see that "All things by immortal power, Near or far, Hiddenly...canst not stir a flower Without troubling of a star." The book gathers together in unusually attractive and. beautiful form forty-four pictures—of children,... | |
| Francis Thompson - 1897 - 238 pages
...land of Luthany, And where the region Elenore ? I do faint therefor. ' When to the new eyes of thee All things by immortal power, Near or far, Hiddenly...canst not stir a flower Without troubling of a star ; When thy song is shield and mirror To the fair snake-curled Pain, Where thou dar'st affront her terror... | |
| Francis Thompson - 1897 - 166 pages
...therefor. ' When to the new eyes of thee All things by immortal power, Near or far, Hiddenly The Mi*. To each other linked are, That thou canst not stir a flower Without troubling of a star ; When thy song is shield and mirror To the fair snake-curled Pain, Where thou dar'st affront her terror... | |
| Caleb Williams Saleeby - 1905 - 130 pages
...that Sirius is conscious, since the poet, remembering the universal sway of gravitation, has written that — " Thou canst not stir a flower Without troubling of a star." Or, per contra, it might be asserted, in strict parallelism to the method of Loeb, that Truth has physical... | |
| Francis Thompson - 1908 - 176 pages
...land of Luthany, And where the region Elenore? I do faint therefor. " When to the new eyes of thee All things by immortal power, Near or far, Hiddenly...canst not stir a flower Without troubling of a star; When thy song is shield and mirror To the fair snake-curled Pain, Where thou dar'st affront her terror... | |
| Francis Thompson - 1910 - 178 pages
...faint therefor. " When to the new eyes of thee All things by immortal power, Near or far, Hiddenl y To each other linked are, That thou canst not stir a flower Without troubling of a star; When thy song is shield and mirror To the fair snake-curled Pain, Where thou dar'st affront her terror... | |
| 1911 - 882 pages
...waters of the soul ; poetry is the true pantheism seeing where God has traced His finger in all things: All things by immortal power, Near or far, Hiddenly...canst not stir a flower Without troubling of a star ("Mistress of Vision"); perceiving how great is allied to small, and how small is great : Nature is... | |
| Henry Ospovat, Oliver Onions - 1911 - 192 pages
...the organic unity of things; and of him it might have been written: " When to the new eyes of thee All things by immortal power, Near or far, Hiddenly...canst not stir a flower Without troubling of a star; When thy song is shield and mirror To the fair snake-curled Pain, Where thou dar'st affront her terror... | |
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