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Pansies : poem by D. H. Lawrence.

16 result/s found for Pansies

... times at Pansies . Flashes of genius, much defiant triviality of revolt-stuff, queer strainings after things not grasped, a gospel of "conscientious sensuality" rushing in at favourable opportunities—all in a formless deliberate disorder, that is the impression up till now—I shall wait to see Page 419 if there is something else. 9 February 1933 I am sending you Pansies . Before sending ...

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... ess. Finally we saw the charming necklet. The white satin ribbon forming the necklet was a perfect background for the cloth flowers in their exquisite colours of fuchsias, sunflowers, daisies and pansies. We emerged from the museum and looked up. Dusk had just fallen—everything was misty blue, mysterious, yet glowing. The twilight was entrancing when the sky was still undarkened and the street lights ...

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... 1959 White Roses 15 September 1959 Here are “Thoughts of the Divine” (The Picture of the flowers—Pansies—sent by the Mother)—they make life happy and beautiful. Sri Aurobindo, The Secret of the Veda: The Guardians of the Light ...

Huta   >   Books   >   Other-Works   >   White Roses
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... scissors, a small electric hot-plate, gelatine powder, tissue-paper, a tiny cushion and so on. We made quite a number of flowers—roses, carnations, buttercups, daisies, love-in-a-mist, chrysanthemums, pansies and poppies. I loved making roses, which when finished looked like real roses, and I made them even more attractive by spraying them with rose-perfume. The slim teacher called me "Butterfly". This ...

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... perfection. On the contrary, to the whole he gives a philosophical turn, and sees all with a nobility of vision, that excludes vulgarity. We shall examine one example: flowers were the couch, Pansies and violets and asphodel And hyacinth, — Earth's freshest softest lap. There they their fill of love and love's disport Took largely, of their mutual guilt the seal, The solace ...

... February 9, 1933 Very glad the dragons of the pressure are turning round and becoming lambs of docility and angels of blessings. I have been glancing at odd times at Pansies . 1 Flashes of genius, much defiant triviality of revolt-stuff, queer straining after things not grasped, a gospel of "conscientious sensuality' rushing in at favourable opportunities—all in a formless ...

... legitimise the fait accompli, whether in Abyssinia or in the realms of literature, but it is too solid to be met with a mere condemnation in principle. Apropos, the other day I opened Lawrence's Pansies once Page 181 more at random and found this: I can't stand Willy Wet-leg Can't stand him at any price. He's resigned and when you hit him He lets you hit him twice ...

... (1883-1898) England and Baroda (1883-1898) Songs to Myrtilla Collected Poems A Rose of Women Now lilies blow upon the windy height, Now flowers the pansy kissed by tender rain, Narcissus builds his house of self-delight And Love's own fairest flower blooms again; Vainly your gems, O meadows, you recall; One simple girl breathes sweeter than you all ...

Sri Aurobindo   >   Books   >   CWSA   >   Collected Poems

... experiment than seriously, a pleasurable indulgence in word-colour touched with mystery. The suggestions from Homer are marked by an asterisk.)   The crocus like a sun made soft and small,  The pansy like a kiss of gleam and shadow Begemmed, together with the colour-call Of flag and hyacinth, Nysa's magic meadow.*  There sprang the great narcissus sent by earth* To snare the ...

... is that translation from Meleager, A Rose of Women, which is worth comparing with F. L. Lucas's rendering. Sri Aurobindo writes : Now lilies blow upon the windy height, Now flowers the pansy kissed by tender rain, Narcissus builds his house of self-delight And Love's own fairest flower blooms again; Vainly your gems, O meadows, you recall; One simple girl breathes sweeter ...

... rhythmic prose) whatever happened to catch his fancy or struck a responsive note in his heart. One of the earliest is from Meleager:   Now lilies blow upon the windy height, Now flowers the pansy kissed by tender rain, Narcissus builds his house of self-delight And love's own fairest flower blooms again; Vainly your gems, O meadows, you recall; One simple girl breathes sweeter ...

... my lyric touch To gild their leisure: nor am I so bold To linger by thy snowy side too long Whom men call perilous. Oh thou art fair! Dawn reddens in thy vermil-tinted cheeks And on thy tresses pansy-purple night Hangs balsam-drenched with dewdrops for her stars. Thou art a flower with candid petals wide, Moon-flushed, most innocent-seeming to the eye; But in thy cup, they say, lurks venomed ...

... as such, and Miss Chadwick is fine too in her straightforward descriptive mysticism:   Still, I arose on a white ladder, Thence in the ultimate whiteness was:  Its energies dropping in pansy-petal  Rich heats for the terminal Cold body to use —   White light, white will, White fire that forms all, Be you wine or be you fever Working in me, your manifestation ...

... Page 70 from Meleager was included in Songs to Myrtilla [Now in Translations (Volume 8 of the Centenary Edition)]: Now lilies blow upon the windy height, Now flowers the pansy kissed by tender rain, Narcissus builds his house of self-delight And Love's own fairest flower blooms again; Vainly your gems, O meadows, you recall; One simple girl breathes sweeter ...

... there must be a perfect harmony in the elements of beauty, and the colour not too subdued as in the clover nor too glaring as in the sunflower, and the perfume not too slight to be noticeable as in the pansy nor too intense for endurance as in the meadow-sweet, and the form not too monotonous as in a canal or too irregular as in the leafless tree, but all perfectly harmonious in themselves and in fit proportion ...

... .org/1-History/ School%20History/History.htm Gardiner, Robert Barlow, ed., Admissions Registers of St. Paul's School from 1876 - 1905 . London: George Bell and Sons, 1906. Ghosh, Pansy Chhaya, "Cotton, Henry (Sir)". In Dictionary of National Biography , vol. 1. Calcutta: Institute of Historical Studies, 1972. Moulton, Edward C., "Cotton, Sir Henry John Stedman (1845 - 1915)" ...