244
GENERAL INDEX.
Quotations :
The authoress of a famous modern romance
y. 230 The beauteous Trent, which in itself enseams,
xii. 502
The beautiful is vanished, i. 269, 317 The bee and spider by a diverse power, iii.
228; iv. 538 The captain's little daughter took her father
by the hand, iii. 147, 177 The changing seasons come and go, viii. 247 The chest contriv'd a double debt to pav, viii.
26, 135 The coach o'erturned, and on the ground
were seen, x. 349, 412 The common damn'd shun his societv, viii.
126, 197
The confidence of Youth our only Art, ii. 222 The cook, her book, iv. 16 The d d strawberry at the bottom of the
glass, x. 30, 233
The dark lantern of the spirit, i. 50, 92 The daughter of debate, viii. 348, 396
- The depraved nature of man, vii. 10, 136
The dismal yew and cypress tall, xi. 89 The East bent low and bowed her head, v
129 The Enthusiast Fancy was a truant ever i.
269, 316
The essence of war is violence, x. 408 The eternal crown of poesy, i. 50 The eternal Peter of the changeless Chair, i.
169 The exercising of weapons putteth away
aches, griefs, and diseases, ix. 169 The eye sees only what it brings the means of
seeing, viii. 406, 472, 515 The fathers of New England, who unbound,
11. *>0o
The ferocious, the inevitable, the untameable
piano, v. 69 The fields in blossom flamed and flushed, vii.
489 ; viii. 37 The frost so hideous, they water mine een,
ix. 270, 315
The glowing sunsets gild its face, xi. 299, 332 The gods never give with both hands, iv. 228 The hand that rocks the cradle, i. 360 ; vi.
380
The Havamal of Odin old, ix. 87, 137, 198 The heart desires, The hand refrains, x. 148
197, 256 The kiss of the sun for pardon, ix. 328, 373,
396
The law condemns the man or woman, v. 129 The life that Nature sends Death soon
destroyeth, iv. 507 The Lord let the house of a brute to the soul
of a man, ix. 188, 233 The^lowing herd winds slowly o'er the lea, vii.
The man whose Tongue before his Witt doth
runne, i. 506
The mighty world of eye and ear, i. 269, 316 The morals of to-day are the immorals of
yesterday, viii. 289
The more he saw, the less he spoke, iv. 8, 58 The more I see of men, i. 320
230
most eloquent voice of our century, xi.
Quotations :
The obstinate man does not hold opinions,.
vi. 48, 118
The only throb it gives, iii. 409, 454 The penalty of not taking an interest, iii. 29* The poor dog, in life the firmest friend, ii-
349, 395 The Pope, my Lords ! Four letters, things,.
not names ! xi. 7, 59, 72 The red moon is up on the moss-covered.
mountains, vi. 368 The rich man's guardian, ii. 349, 395 The road to heaven lies as near by water &s-
by land, viii. 445 The roads are not passable, xii. 279 The rule of the road is a paradox quite, iu
162, 254
The scales that fence, v. 230 The scent of violets hidden in the grass, v. 129" The Scipios' tomb contains no ashes now, ii.
508 ; iii. 15
The soul that fixes upon earth, vi. 509 The success of that petty province of Holland,,.
v. 230, 371 The Survivorship of a Good Man in his Son r
vi. 290, 374 The swallow, the swallow, she does with her
bring, iii. 69
The tall hills Titan discovered, i. 50 The tear down childhood's cheek that flows,
ix. 109, 158
The thin red line, ix. 130 The third part of these people could not tell,.
v. 230, 336 The trees began to whisper, and the wind
began to roll, iii. 15, 57 The very law that moulds a tear, x. 10 The Vestal priestess of a sisterhood, xii. 100,.
146, 166, 190 The vine-covered hills and gay regions of
France, i. 269, 317
The wind might blow through an English- man's house, vii. 90 The young and the beautiful, why do- they
die, i. 149 Their eyes' blue languish, and their raven
hair, ix. 231 Their look, with the reach of past ages, was
wise, ii. 129, 178
Their memory liveth on your hills, i. 128 Their sword," death's stamp, where it did
mark, it took, xi. 360, 412 Then como to me and bring with thee, ii. 188- Then from out his mouth he spat, xi. 379 There are people who think they write and
speak finely, v. 230 There are two heavens, both made of love, iv-
28 There are very few persons who pursue-
science with true dignity, vii. 288 ; viii. 117 There in that smallest bud lay furled, v
327 ; vii. 257 There is a cropping -time in the races of men,-
viii. 89, 152 There is a great deal of human nature hi man,.
vii. 489 ; viii. 14, 55
There is no adaptation or universal applica- bility in men, vii. 369 There is no great and no small, xi. 230 There is no love but at first sight, viii. 170