| Wolf Gerhard Schmidt - Language Arts & Disciplines - 2003 - 876 pages
...rolling down" (ebd., S. 122). 396, lOff. Die Bäume [...] Bäume] Vgl. "Thy family grew like an oak on the mountain, which meeteth the wind with its lofty head. But now it is torn from the earth" (The Poems of Ossian (Anm. zu S. 15, A3), S. 165) und "I must fall [...] like a leafless oak: it grew... | |
| Dafydd Moore - Celts in literature - 2004 - 612 pages
...reach the fource of thy race, O Connal ? and who recount thy fathers ? Thy family grew like an oak on the mountain, which meeteth the wind with its lofty...the din of arms; and here the groans of the dying. Bloody are the wars of Fingal ! O Connal ! it was here thou didffc fall. Thine arm was like a florm... | |
| History - 1764 - 554 pages
...> Thy family grew like an oak on the mountain, which meeteth the wind with its lofty head. Who mall fupply the place of Connal ? Here was the din of arms...groans of the dying. Mournful are the wars of Fingal ! О Connal ! it was here thou didft fall. Thine arm was like a ftorm ; thy fword a beam of the iky... | |
| Early English newspapers - 1760 - 708 pages
...with its lofty head. Who (hall ant, who holds the leg while it is faw- fupply the place of Genital? Here was the din of arms ; and here the groans of the living. ing, muft obferve not to lift it upwards, which would clog the iniirament. Before the invention... | |
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