National Hymns: How They are Written and how They are Not Written. A Lyric and National Study for the TimesRudd & Carleton, 1861 - 152 pagini |
Din interiorul cărții
Rezultatele 6 - 10 din 20
Pagina 60
... verses as a rough sketch of the form which the British national hymn might conveniently take at the period referred to above : - GOD SAVE JOHN BULL . God save me , great John Bull ! Long keep my pocket full ! God save John Bull ! Ever ...
... verses as a rough sketch of the form which the British national hymn might conveniently take at the period referred to above : - GOD SAVE JOHN BULL . God save me , great John Bull ! Long keep my pocket full ! God save John Bull ! Ever ...
Pagina 62
... verse to a most remark- able extent . Newspapers which undertook to gather these effusions of popular sentiment ... verses was unmitigated nonsense , it is true ; much of the residue was commonplace ; but really spirited and well ...
... verse to a most remark- able extent . Newspapers which undertook to gather these effusions of popular sentiment ... verses was unmitigated nonsense , it is true ; much of the residue was commonplace ; but really spirited and well ...
Pagina 63
... verses were written about that time . The reader will remember how intently the whole country had watched Fort Sumter through four long months ( it seems as if it had been four years , and had happened twenty years ago ! ) and with what ...
... verses were written about that time . The reader will remember how intently the whole country had watched Fort Sumter through four long months ( it seems as if it had been four years , and had happened twenty years ago ! ) and with what ...
Pagina 67
... verses were then read by the mem- ber who opened the envelope containing them . If they were condemned at once by a nearly unanimous voice , they were cast into a waste - basket ready at hand ; if not , they were reserved for future ...
... verses were then read by the mem- ber who opened the envelope containing them . If they were condemned at once by a nearly unanimous voice , they were cast into a waste - basket ready at hand ; if not , they were reserved for future ...
Pagina 71
... verse , " is a very fine thing for a poet to write about ; but an almost impos- sible thing to find . Apollo seems to have forbidden the bans of that much desired union . There , indeed , are some rare exceptions to this general rule ...
... verse , " is a very fine thing for a poet to write about ; but an almost impos- sible thing to find . Apollo seems to have forbidden the bans of that much desired union . There , indeed , are some rare exceptions to this general rule ...
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
National Hymns: How They are Written and how They are Not Written. A Lyric ... Richard Grant White Vizualizare completă - 1861 |
National Hymns: How They are Written and how They are Not Written : a Lyric ... Richard Grant White Vizualizare completă - 1862 |
National Hymns: How They are Written and how They are Not Written. A Lyric ... Richard Grant White Vizualizare completă - 1861 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
abreuve nos sillons Amen American anthem battle battle of Hastings bless called Carey chorus citoyens competitors composition dear E Pluribus Unum earth enemies England English evermore excited favor feeling Flag of freemen formez vos bataillons Fort Sumter Gentleman's Magazine George glorious dreams God save HAMILTON FISH hand Hark harmony heart Henry Carey hills and streams home of Freedom honor Hozanna Jacobite John Bull liberty LIGHT lines live loyal lyric manuscripts Marchons Marseillaise national airs noble O'er origin peace poets popular prize qu'un sang impur race reason reign rhyme RICHARD GRANT WHITE Rule Britannia sang impur abreuve save our Fatherland Save the King save the land Scotch sent sentiment sing songs received soul spirit stanza Star-Spangled Banner stars strong style sung thee thou throne tion Tis Freedom's Jubilee,-hurrah truth verses victorious voice wave words and music writers written
Pasaje populare
Pagina 18 - O'er the land of the free, and the home of the brave? On the shore, dimly seen through the mists of the deep, Where the foe's haughty host in dread silence reposes, What is that which the breeze, o'er the towering steep, As it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses?
Pagina 42 - King ! Long live our noble King! God save the King! Send him victorious, Happy and glorious, Long to reign over us ! God save the King!
Pagina 40 - God save great George our king! Long live our noble king! God save the king!
Pagina 43 - O Lord our God, arise! Scatter his enemies, And make them fall; Confound their politics, Frustrate their knavish tricks: On Thee our hopes we fix — God save us all!
Pagina 76 - Still more majestic shalt thou rise, More dreadful from each foreign stroke; As the loud blast that tears the skies Serves but to root thy native oak.
Pagina 45 - God Bliss the PRINCE OF WALES The True-born Prince of Wales Sent us by THEE Grant us one favour more The King for to restore As Thou hast done before THE FAMILIB.
Pagina 42 - May she defend our laws, and ever give us cause to sing with heart and voice, God save the Queen.
Pagina 33 - A nation properly signifies a great number of families derived from the same blood, born in the same country, and living under the same government.
Pagina 47 - ... sword in hand with such impetuosity, that in less than ten minutes after the battle began, the king's troops were broken and totally routed. The dragoons fled in the utmost confusion at the first onset ; the general officers, having made some unsuccessful efforts to rally them, thought proper to consult their own safety by an expeditious retreat towards Coldstream on the Tweed.
Pagina 47 - At length, perceiving they had occupied the rising ground to the southward of Falkirk, he ordered his cavalry to advance, and drive them from the eminence; while his infantry formed, and were drawn up in order of battle. The highlanders kept up their fire, and took aim so well, that the assailants were broke by the first volley : they retreated with precipitation, and fell in amongst the infantry, which were likewise discomposed by the wind and rain beating with great violence in their faces, wetting...