56
\
That jewell’d ;«ass of «rillinery, 292,13 ;
I heard no sound where I stood 296,1 ;
The shadow still the iame; 304,56;
By that you swore to withstand? 292,50.
Hebung 1 — 2 :
If aught of urncient worth be there 1,12;
To would a wighty state’s decrees, 263,43 ;
A sacred, teeret, unapproached woe, 486,54.
Hebung 1—3 ;
G/ode over earth tili the t g/orious creature 535,3;
That jt'okes with empire, j’ield you time 1,10;
As wan, as chill, as w\\d, as now; 265,41;
In wasses thick with wilky cones. 37,36 ;
Änght English lily, ^reathing a prayer 299,26.
Hebung 1—4:
From the </iamond-ledges that jut from the </ells ; 20,22;
Grimly with swords that were sharp from the grindstone,
535» 1 5 i
A (Aequer-work of beam and .sAade 265,39 ;
The wild unrest that lives in woe 251,51.
Hebung 2—3 :
With garrulous rase and oi\y courtesies 171,56;
And airy /orms of /litting change. 8,80;
On my fresh ^ope, to the Ha 11 to-night. 299,74;
Those writhed /imbs of /ightning speed; 8,67;
Whirling their sabres in rircles of light! 569,21;
And lash with Storni the s/reaming pane ? 265,28;
Begotten by eno$antment-o$atterers they, 421,8;
To hang on /iptoe, tossing up 45,22.
Hebung 2—4 :
Bei dieser Stellung der Stäbe, das heißt, wenn dieselben
an den Haupttonstellen des Verses, der Caesur und dem Vers
ende stehefq ist die Wirkung der Alliteration besonders kräftig.
Beneath all yäncied hopes and /ears 260,21;
I think that /ride hath now no /lace 5,24;
Not a bell was n.mg, not a prayer was read; 305,28;
What is i'rue at last will /eil; 630,9;