| Roger Garis - 1963 - 100 Seiten
...you and you can pour it over yourself. ALICE ANN (stubbornly). No. I refuse to acknowledge defeat. "This rock shall fly from its firm base as soon as I." IDA (giggling). I'll bet it would fly from its firm base, if you came near it. JULIA (who has evidently... | |
| Claude Moore Fuess - 1928 - 314 Seiten
...details of establishing [101] a National Bank were being considered, Choate was no man to shout, jGome one, come all. This rock shall fly From its firm base as soon as I!' All this is merely saying that Choate was Lincolnian rather than Wilsonian in his idealism. The arrogant... | |
| Booker T Washington, Louis R Harlan - 1977 - 748 Seiten
...in Hinds county, not far from Jackson. Wherever they can be placed, merit shall be the test with me. "Come one come all, This rock shall fly, From its firm base, as soon as I." About the Judgeship. I fully concur in your suggestions. I have cause, however, to suspect that this... | |
| Katherine Menz - 1990 - 462 Seiten
...little legs wide apart, was wielding a fence paling in lieu of a lance and proclaiming in a loud voice, 'this rock shall fly from its firm base as soon as I.' Mary, bubbling with laughter, called out, 'Grammercy, brave Knights. 37 Pray be more merciful than... | |
| Henry David Thoreau - 1993 - 372 Seiten
...upon the rock with the rock also at your back and as in the case of King James and Roderick Dhu can say come one come all This rock shall fly From its firm base as soon as I. Such uttered or not is the strength of your sentence. Sentences in which their is no strain. A fluttering... | |
| Leslie Margolin - 212 Seiten
...found holding a group of tormenting boys at arm's length," shouting these lines from Sir Walter Scott: Come one, come all. This rock shall fly From its firm base, as soon as I. Confirming the early appearance of every virtue, in his first year at boarding school, at the age of... | |
| H. J. Eysenck - 1995 - 360 Seiten
...the age of five, he was found holding a group of tormenting boys at arm's length, shouting meanwhile, 'Come one, come all. This rock shall fly From its firm base, as soon as I.' (9) The amount and character of his reading. By six, under the tutelage of Adele, Galton had become... | |
| James Alan Marten - 1998 - 310 Seiten
...directions, except one bold, black-eyed girl, who defiantly placed herself against a wall, saying, "Come one, come all, this rock shall fly from its firm base as soon as I! Come on, boys, I ain't afraid of you!" "A fort! a fort to take!" shouted the boys. "Fire!" said the... | |
| Andrew Johnson - 1967 - 844 Seiten
...< Great cheering. > Let them come. In the language of the illustrious bard, I say let them come — "Come one, come all, this rock shall fly, From its firm base as soon as I."12 <Loud and continued applause. > I stood by my country and my country's interest in more perilous... | |
| Ulla E. Dydo, William Rice - 704 Seiten
...such as Longfellow's "They left footsteps in the sands of time" (331; "A Psalm of Life") or Scott's "Come one come all this rock shall fly from its firm base as soon as I" (316, 366; "The Lady of the Lake," canto 5, stanza 10). That is by the way so to speak do they hear... | |
| |