| Alice Johnson Jones - 1906 - 134 páginas
...BEGUN IN 1858 3l?arbarlJ College ILibrnru FKOM THK SUBSCRIPTION FUND HliCUN IN 1858 A CONTRIBUTION TO NEW ENGLAND FOLK-LORE BY ALICE J. JONES "A man may go back to the place of his birth He cannot (50 back to his youth." 190«: THE MILNE PRINTERY NEWPORT, RI Copyrighted BY AUCB J. JONBS 1906 Qln... | |
| John Burroughs - 1906 - 94 páginas
...mother's face. O sad, sad hills! O cold, cold hearth! In sorrow he learned this truth — One may return to the place of his birth, He cannot go back to his youth. OF THE UNIVERSITY ) 70 (Che Btoettf&e Electrotyped and printed by HO Hmghton &• Co. Cambridge, Mass.,... | |
| John Burroughs - 1906 - 92 páginas
...mother's face. O sad, sad hills! O cold, cold hearth! In sorrow he learned this truth — One may return to the place of his birth, He cannot go back to his youth. ;£be OiUctgifte pees* EUctrotyped and printed by HO Heughton & Co. Cambridge, Man., USA ... | |
| Joe Mitchell Chapple - 1911 - 936 páginas
...forget his pains. Oh, sad, sad hills; oh, cold, cold hearth! In sorrow he learned the truth, — One may go back to the place of his birth, — He cannot go back to his youth. John Burroughs. INDEX 1TLES AND AUTHORS *b:de with Me. WH Monk 333 Adventure on Wheels. An. Anon 300... | |
| Robert John Henderson De Loach - 1912 - 184 páginas
...youth crops out: " O sad,' sad hills ! O cold, cold hearth ! In sorrow he learned this truth — One may go back to the place of his birth, He cannot go back to his youth. " Again Jn "Snow Birds" he says: "Thy voice brings back dear boyhood days When we were gay together."... | |
| Clara Barrus - 1914 - 350 páginas
...face. Oh, sad, sad hills! Oh, cold, cold hearth! In sorrow he learned this truth — One may return to the place of his birth, He cannot go back to his youth. But a half-loaf is better than no bread, and Mr. Burroughs has now yielded to this deep-seated longing... | |
| Mary Griffin Webb, Edna Lenore Webb - 1914 - 642 páginas
...face. Oh, sad, sad hills ! Oh, cold, cold hearth ! In sorrow he learned this truth — One may return to the place of his birth, He cannot go back to his youth. His other poem, Waiting, perhaps best known, is here given : WAITING Serene, I fold my hands and wait,... | |
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