| Dean Dudley - 1851 - عدد الصفحات: 268
...recorders, pipes and cornets, were making night vibrate with thrilling melody? " The dews of summer night did fall, The moon, sweet regent of the sky,...of Cumnor Hall, And many an oak that grew thereby. Now nought was heard beneath the skies — The sounds of busy life were still, Save an unhappy lady's... | |
| Robert Chambers - 1851 - عدد الصفحات: 764
...the impulses of his heart instead of his ambition. Cumnor Hall. The dews of summer night did full, The moon (sweet regent of the sky) Silvered the walls...of Cumnor Hall, And many an oak that grew thereby. Now nought was heard beneath the skiei (The sounds of busy life were still), Save an unhappy lady's... | |
| Dean Dudley - 1851 - عدد الصفحات: 262
...recorders, pipes and cornets, were making night vibrate with thrilling melody ? " The dews of Rammer night did fall, The moon, sweet regent of the sky, Silvered the walls of Cumnor Hall, And many nu oak that grew thereby. Now nought was heard beneath the skies — The sounds of busy life were still,... | |
| Mary Russell Mitford - 1852 - عدد الصفحات: 588
...Sir Walter Scott, in early life, by the first stanza,* the world is probably * " The dews of summer night did fall, The moon, sweet regent of the sky,...of Cumnor Hall, And many an oak that grew thereby." indebted for Kenilworth. Mr. Chambers says that of this ballad an imperfect, altered, and corrected... | |
| Durham city, sch - 1852 - عدد الصفحات: 486
...BAILE V IG CUMNOR HALL. The dews of summer night did fall ; The moon sweet regent of the sky, Silver'd the walls of Cumnor Hall, And many an oak that grew thereby. Now nought was heard beneath the skies. The sounds of busy life were still, Save an unhappy lady's... | |
| Morbida - 1854 - عدد الصفحات: 196
...night as this," &c. J " The dews of summer night did fall ; The moon, sweet regent of the sky, Silver'd the walls of Cumnor Hall, And many an oak that grew thereby." — MICKLE. " The first stanza especially had a peculiar species of enchantment for the youthful ear... | |
| Book - 1854 - عدد الصفحات: 496
...on their way. MALL. THE dews of summer night did fall, The moon (sweet regent of the sky) Silver'd the walls of Cumnor Hall, And many an oak that grew thereby. Now nought was heard beneath the skies (The sounds of busy life were still), Save an unhappy lady's... | |
| Mary Russell Mitford - 1855 - عدد الصفحات: 580
...Sir Walter Scott, in early life, by the first stanza,* the world is probably * " The dews of summer night did fall, The moon, sweet regent of the sky,...of Cumnor Hall, And many an oak that grew thereby." indebted for Kenilworth. Mr. Chambers says that of this ballad an imperfect, altered, and corrected... | |
| George Henry Lewes - 1855 - عدد الصفحات: 482
...speaks of the verse of an old ballad which haunted his boyhood ; it is this: The dews of night began to fall ; The moon, sweet regent of the sky, Silvered...of Cumnor Hall, And many an oak that grew thereby. This verse we will rearrange as a translator would rearrange it : The nightly dews commenced to fall... | |
| Richard Holt Hutton, Walter Bagehot - 1855 - عدد الصفحات: 522
...that half-mystic idea that consecrated what it touched ; the moonlight, as it were, which " Silver'd the walls of Cumnor Hall, And many an oak that grew thereby." Why, then, did the English endure the everlasting Chancellor ? The fact is, that Lord Eldon's rule... | |
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