| Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight - 1850 - 678 sider
...last, to all, And every winter change to spring. " So runs my dream : but what am I ? An infant crying in the night : An infant crying for a light : And with no language but a cry." The above quotation may be supposed to convey a meaning, to which we should take serious exceptions,... | |
| 1850 - 676 sider
...last, to all, And every winter change to spring. " So runs my dream : but what am I ? An infant crying in the night : An infant crying for a light : And with no language but a cry." The above quotation may be supposed to convey a meaning, to which we should take serious exceptions,... | |
| Thomas Sadler - 1859 - 226 sider
...meaning with unusual fulness, has it never seemed that still in the presence of the truth you were but as a little child— " An infant crying in the night; An infant crying for the light, And with no language but a cry ?" Have you not been ready to kneel down... | |
| Caroline Fairfield Corbin - 1874 - 342 sider
...she had found it in hell. Oh, who would tell her where was God, and what was God! " An infant crying in the night; An infant crying for a light; And with no language but a cry." That was her condition exactly. She knew enough about science to feel that it had no answer to... | |
| Moses True Brown - 1886 - 322 sider
...rhythm voices the cry of the helpless Vital of the new-born babe : — " What am I ? An infant crying in the night : An infant crying for a light : And with no language but a cry." TBNOTSON. The second special organ of manifestation is the Muscular apparatus. Without muscle... | |
| Earnest Elmo Calkins - 1915 - 416 sider
...realizing that light might be advertised in a lighter vein, says. Tennyson says : "An infant crying in the night, An infant crying for a light, And with no language but a cry." Edison says that if the infant is crying only for a light, an electric light can be turned on... | |
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