Praise of Colonus






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A Portrait
The Book-Hunter
Baudelaire to His Love
I Am the Song of Love
The Fool's Prayer
Full of murmurs
A Poem
Kan-il-Lak the Singer
The Chariot Race
Long Life Not to be Desired
Praise of Colonus
Prayer
The Battle of Blenheim
At the Carnival
Before the Feast of Shushan
A Ditty
The Apothecary's
Moonlight in the Pines


Kitchen Showrooms
Disegni per Bambini
Lego

Satin Black Trousers
Thick Knee High Socks
Drawstring Yoga Pants
Wozki Chicco
Dockers Shoes
Trachten Lederhose
Bodum Coffee Press

Lalka Barbie
Zabawki Fisher Price
Lezaczki
Lozeczka dla Dzieci
Wozek Mutsy
Nosidelka dla dzieci
Pieluchy
Przewijaki
Wozki dzieciece
Zjezdzalnie dla dzieci

Bluzy Dresowe
Foteliki Bebe Confort
Hulajnogi
Topy
Naszyjniki
Wiazania
Namioty
Sukienki
Jablonie
Katalog - Fryzjerzy









thou art standing now On Colonus' sparry brow;
All the haunts of Attic ground,
Where the matchless coursers bound,
Boast not, through their realms of bliss, Other spot as fair as this.
Frequent down this greenwood dale, Mourns the warbling nightingale,
Nestling 'mid the thickest screen
Of the ivy's darksome green;
Or where, each empurpled shoot Drooping with its myriad fruit,
Curled in many a mazy twine, Blooms the never-trodden vine,
By the god's protecting power
Safe from sun and storm and shower.
Bacchus here, the summer long, Revels with the goddess throng,
Nymphs who erst, on Nyssa's wild,
Reared to man the rosy child.
Here Narcissus, day by day,
Buds, in clustering beauty gay, Sipping aye, at morn and even, All the nectar dews of heaven,
Wont amid your locks to shine,
Ceres fair, and Proserpine.
Here the golden Crocus gleams, Murmur here unfailing streams,
Sleep the bubbling fountains never, Feeding pure Cephisus river,
Whose prolific waters daily Bid the pastures blossom gayly, With the showers of spring-tide blending,
On the lap of earth descending. Here the Nine, to notes of pleasure,
Love to tread their choral measure, Venus, o'er those flowerets gliding,
Oft her rein of gold is guiding.
Now a brighter boast than all Shall my grateful song recall;
Yon proud shrub, that will not smile,
Nor on Asiatic soil, But unsown, unsought by toil,
Self-engendered, year by year,
Springs to life a native here. Tree the trembling foeman shuns,
Garland for Athena's sons,
May the olive long be ours, None may break its sacred bowers,
None its boughs of silvery gray
Young or old may bear away: Morian Jove, with look of love,
Ever guards it from above,
Blue-eyed Pallas watch unsleeping O'er her favorite tree is keeping.

Swell the song of praise again;
Other boons demand my strain, Other blessings we inherit,
Granted by the mighty Spirit;
On the sea and on the shore,
Ours the bridle and the oar.
Son of Saturn old! whose sway Stormy winds and waves obey, Thine be honor's well-earned meed,
Tamer of the champing steed: First he wore on Attic plain
Bit of steel and curbing rein.
Oft too o'er the waters blue, Athens, strain thy laboring crew;
Practiced hands the bark are plying, Oars are bending, spray is flying,
Sunny waves beneath them glancing,
Sportive Nereids round them dancing, With their hundred feet in motion,
Twinkling 'mid the foam of ocean.