| Francis Fisher Browne - 1906 - 548 ページ
...fair sleeping brow; She had each folded flower in sight — Where are those dreamers now? One 'mid the forests of the West, By a dark stream is laid ; The Indian knows his place of rest, Far in the cedar shade. The sea, the blue lone sea, hath one — He lies where pearls lie deep ; He was the loved... | |
| Geoffrey Buckwalter - 1907 - 248 ページ
...brow; She had each folded flower in sight, — Where are they sleeping now ? 2. One, midst the forest of the West, By a dark stream is laid; The Indian knows his place of rest, Far in the cedar shade. The sea, the lone blue sea, hath one; He rests where pearls lie deep; He was the loved... | |
| 1912 - 616 ページ
...fair sleeping brow; She had each folded flower in sight — Where are those dreamers now? One 'mid the forests of the West, By a dark stream is laid; The Indian knows his place of rest, Far in the cedar shade. The sea, the blue lone sea, hath one — He lies where pearls lie deep; He was the loved... | |
| 1912 - 616 ページ
...of the West, By a dark stream is laid; The Indian knows his place of rest, Far in the cedar shade. The sea, the blue lone sea, hath one — He lies where pearls lie deep; He was the loved of all, yet none O'er his low bed may weep. One sleeps where southern vines are dressed Above... | |
| John Clay - 1918 - 98 ページ
...had only fast waning light. It made me think of the "Graves of a Household," when Mrs. Hemans says: "One midst the forests of the West By a dark stream...laid, The Indian knows his place of rest Far in the cedar shade." I have touched on these scenes because they left an indelible mark on my mind. They opened... | |
| Frank Boreham - 1921 - 216 ページ
...bent at night o'er each fair sleeping brow.' Then came, again and again, the call of the vast. And now — 'one 'midst the forests of the West by a dark stream is laid'; 'the sea, the blue, lone sea, hath one, he lies where pearls lie deep' ; 'one sleeps where southern vines... | |
| Katherine Hale - 1922 - 200 ページ
...Army, a brother of Felicia Hemans, the English poetess. In 1825 she writes in "Graves of a Household": "One midst the forests of the West By a dark stream...laid ; The Indian knows his place of rest, Far in the cedar's shade." Tom Moore was also a visitor in Kingston. In the edition of his poems published in... | |
| Sir Henry John Newbolt - 1922 - 1032 ページ
...had each folded flower in sight, The same fond mother bent at night Where are those dreamers now t One, 'midst the forests of the West, By a dark stream...laid. The Indian knows his place of rest, Far in the cedar shade. The sea, the blue lone sea, hath one ! He lies where pearls lie deep : He was the lov'd... | |
| Federico Llaverías - 1925 - 544 ページ
...and the blue wares of the lakes of the United States, as described in the poem above alluded 10 — " One, midst the forests of the West By a dark stream...laid, The Indian knows his place of rest, Far in the cedar shade." The thankless return England has received from the continental statesmen for subsidiiing... | |
| 1927 - 490 ページ
...wide, By mount, and stream, and sea. The same fond mother bent at night O'er each fair sleeping brow. One midst the forests of the West, By a dark stream,...laid; The Indian knows his place of rest Far in the cedar shade. The sea, the blue lone sea, hath one, He lies where pearls lie deep, He was the loved... | |
| |