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- .' . . . . .. - - ( > ) ) / f - ''- , _ , . 5 . . ' . ( , . ) .>!;* ( -j j ): ' . ..> . ge ;".' THE ( SAND-SPUR. SAND SPUR. ) $ I . -" .STICK TO IT. " ''f}. ' \ VOL. 4., ( D . )!'r. ', ' '" . WINTER PARK, FLA., ( MARCH MARGH ) 20, 1898. I !( 1- 1 )',' :..'( . - ) "( "No. NO. )- 2. 'i,,'."t' - . ..;f: ' 'r.,, ' -" .I. '', r ' Ly.T 'f __ /,:. f ( ' , ) <",; : ; "-. ; .C'} ( "" . . ( rrKRARY. LITERARY. ) ( -t. t. )..';. .: . : ( \if if ) :..:' ;' c. '-'. ".':--, J ;,::! . t. .' f i , . :,: . SONNETS. ", : ( What Wbat ) is ( a. a ) sonnet? 'Tis the pearly'shell Scorn not the sonnet; ( critic critic. ) you have frowned, . .. That murmurs of the ( far-off far off ) murmuring sea ; Mindless of its just honors. With this key A precious jewel carved most curiously ; Shakespeare unlocked his heart; the melody It.is a little picture painted well. Of this small lute gave ease to. ( Petrarch's Petrarch.s ) wound ; ' What is a sonnet?- ( Tis 'Tis ) the tear that fell A thousand times this pipe did Tasso sound ; Frbnl( . - ) a great poet's hidden ( ecstasy- ecstasy ) >Camoens soothed with it an exile's grief; A ( two-edged two edged twedged twd-edged twd ) sword, a star, a ( song-ah song ah ) me ! The ( sonnet onnet ) ( glittered Rlittered ) a gay myrtle leaf Sometimes a ( heavy-tolling heavy tolling ).funeral bell. Amid the cypress with which Dante crowned This was the flame. that shook with Dante's breath ; His visionary brow; a ( glow-worm glow worm glow-wornl wornl ) ( lamp. lamp ) The solemn organ whereon Milton played ; It cheered mild Spenser, called from fairyland And the clear glass where ( Shakespeare's Shakespeares ) shadow To struggle through dark ways ; and when a damp falls.: Fell round the path of ( Milton Mi1ton ), in his hand A sea this is ; beware who ( venturcth ventureth ) ! The ( thing t4ing ) became a trumpet, whence he blew For like a fjord the narrow floor is laid( , . ) ( Soul-animating Soul animating ) ( strains-alas strains alas ), too few ! . ( Mid-ocean Mid ocean 1id-ocean 1id 31id-ocean 31id ) deep to ( the tbe ) sheer mountain walls. Wordsworth. Richard ( IVatson Watson ) Gilder. An old man in a lodge within a park ; ( When \Vhen Vhen ) to soft sleep we give ourselves away, ( The Tbe ) ( chamber-walls chamber walls ) depicted all around And in a dream as in a fairy ( bark bark. ) With portraitures of huntsman, hawk, and hound, Drift on and on through the enchanted dark ( - . ) And the ( hurt burt ) deer. He listeneth to the lark. To purple ( daybreak-little daybreak little ) thought we ( pay par ) Whose song comes with the sunshine through the To that sweet ( hitter bitter ) world we know by ( day. clay. ) t dark ( We \Ve Ve ) are clean quit of it, as is a lark . Of painted glass in leaden lattice bound ; So high in heaven no human ( eye-can eye can ) mark , - He listeneth and he laugheth at the sound, The ( thin tbin ) swift pinion cleaving through the gray. '1" Then writeth in a book like ( any auy ) clerk. Till we awake ill fate can do no ill, ... He is the poet of the dawn, who wrote ' The resting heart shall not take up again a1 The Canterbury Tales, and his old age - The heavy load that yet must make it bleed ; ,; ( Made lade ) beautiful with song ; as I read For ( this tbis ) brief space the loud world's voice is still, . :I i I hear the crowing ( cock cock. )( , . ) I ( hear'the hearthe ) note No faintest echo of it brings us pain. - # Of ( lark lark. ) and linnet, and from every page How will it be when we shall sleep indeed? Rise odors of ploughed field or flowery mead.o'" . Thomas Bailey Aldrich. Longfellow. 3 II j I
Object Description
Title | Sandspur, Vol. 04 No. 02, March 20, 1898 |
Tag | DP0008505 |
Subject |
Rollins College (Winter Park, Fla.) -- Newspapers. Student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida -- Winter Park -- Newspapers. |
Description | Rollins College student newspaper, written by the students and published at Rollins College. The Sandspur started as a literary journal.andandand |
Date Original | 1898-03-20 |
Publisher | Rollins College Press. |
Contributors | Press of the Orange County Reporter. |
Format-Medium | Serial |
Size | 27 x 20 cm. |
Call Number / ID # | LH 1. R6 S26 v.1-4 1894-1898 |
Subject-Topic | Educating our Children |
Repository | Rollins College |
Repository Collection | Sandspur Student Newspaper |
Type |
Still image Text |
Language | eng |
Coverage-Spatial | Winter Park (Fla.) |
Coverage-Temporal | 20th century |
Rights | All rights to images are held by the respective holding institution. This image is posted publicly for non-profit educational uses, excluding printed publication. To purchase copies of images and/or for copyright information contact the respective holding institution. |
Digital Publisher | Electronically reproduced by the Digital Services unit of the University of Central Florida Libraries, Orlando, 2005. |
Digital Reproduction Specifications | This image was derived from an uncompressed TIFF image scanned at a minimum of 400 dpi. |
Rating |
Description
Title | 01 |
Title-Alternative | SandspurVol04No02 |
Subject | Sonnets. |
Description | Four Sonnets. |
Repository | Rollins College |
Repository Collection | Sandspur Student Newspaper |
Rights | All rights to images are held by the respective holding institution. This image is posted publicly for non-profit educational uses, excluding printed publication. To purchase copies of images and/or for copyright information contact the respective holding institution. |
Transcript | - .' . . . . .. - - ( > ) ) / f - ''- , _ , . 5 . . ' . ( , . ) .>!;* ( -j j ): ' . ..> . ge ;".' THE ( SAND-SPUR. SAND SPUR. ) $ I . -" .STICK TO IT. " ''f}. ' \ VOL. 4., ( D . )!'r. ', ' '" . WINTER PARK, FLA., ( MARCH MARGH ) 20, 1898. I !( 1- 1 )',' :..'( . - ) "( "No. NO. )- 2. 'i,,'."t' - . ..;f: ' 'r.,, ' -" .I. '', r ' Ly.T 'f __ /,:. f ( ' , ) <",; : ; "-. ; .C'} ( "" . . ( rrKRARY. LITERARY. ) ( -t. t. )..';. .: . : ( \if if ) :..:' ;' c. '-'. ".':--, J ;,::! . t. .' f i , . :,: . SONNETS. ", : ( What Wbat ) is ( a. a ) sonnet? 'Tis the pearly'shell Scorn not the sonnet; ( critic critic. ) you have frowned, . .. That murmurs of the ( far-off far off ) murmuring sea ; Mindless of its just honors. With this key A precious jewel carved most curiously ; Shakespeare unlocked his heart; the melody It.is a little picture painted well. Of this small lute gave ease to. ( Petrarch's Petrarch.s ) wound ; ' What is a sonnet?- ( Tis 'Tis ) the tear that fell A thousand times this pipe did Tasso sound ; Frbnl( . - ) a great poet's hidden ( ecstasy- ecstasy ) >Camoens soothed with it an exile's grief; A ( two-edged two edged twedged twd-edged twd ) sword, a star, a ( song-ah song ah ) me ! The ( sonnet onnet ) ( glittered Rlittered ) a gay myrtle leaf Sometimes a ( heavy-tolling heavy tolling ).funeral bell. Amid the cypress with which Dante crowned This was the flame. that shook with Dante's breath ; His visionary brow; a ( glow-worm glow worm glow-wornl wornl ) ( lamp. lamp ) The solemn organ whereon Milton played ; It cheered mild Spenser, called from fairyland And the clear glass where ( Shakespeare's Shakespeares ) shadow To struggle through dark ways ; and when a damp falls.: Fell round the path of ( Milton Mi1ton ), in his hand A sea this is ; beware who ( venturcth ventureth ) ! The ( thing t4ing ) became a trumpet, whence he blew For like a fjord the narrow floor is laid( , . ) ( Soul-animating Soul animating ) ( strains-alas strains alas ), too few ! . ( Mid-ocean Mid ocean 1id-ocean 1id 31id-ocean 31id ) deep to ( the tbe ) sheer mountain walls. Wordsworth. Richard ( IVatson Watson ) Gilder. An old man in a lodge within a park ; ( When \Vhen Vhen ) to soft sleep we give ourselves away, ( The Tbe ) ( chamber-walls chamber walls ) depicted all around And in a dream as in a fairy ( bark bark. ) With portraitures of huntsman, hawk, and hound, Drift on and on through the enchanted dark ( - . ) And the ( hurt burt ) deer. He listeneth to the lark. To purple ( daybreak-little daybreak little ) thought we ( pay par ) Whose song comes with the sunshine through the To that sweet ( hitter bitter ) world we know by ( day. clay. ) t dark ( We \Ve Ve ) are clean quit of it, as is a lark . Of painted glass in leaden lattice bound ; So high in heaven no human ( eye-can eye can ) mark , - He listeneth and he laugheth at the sound, The ( thin tbin ) swift pinion cleaving through the gray. '1" Then writeth in a book like ( any auy ) clerk. Till we awake ill fate can do no ill, ... He is the poet of the dawn, who wrote ' The resting heart shall not take up again a1 The Canterbury Tales, and his old age - The heavy load that yet must make it bleed ; ,; ( Made lade ) beautiful with song ; as I read For ( this tbis ) brief space the loud world's voice is still, . :I i I hear the crowing ( cock cock. )( , . ) I ( hear'the hearthe ) note No faintest echo of it brings us pain. - # Of ( lark lark. ) and linnet, and from every page How will it be when we shall sleep indeed? Rise odors of ploughed field or flowery mead.o'" . Thomas Bailey Aldrich. Longfellow. 3 II j I |
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