I have eaten your bread and salt, I have drunk your water and wine; The deaths ye died I have watched beside, And the lives that ye led were mine. Was there aught that I did not share In vigil or toil or ease,— One joy or woe that I did not know, Dear... Rudyard Kipling: An Attempt at Appreciation - Страница 57написао/ла G. F. Monkshood - 1899 - 236 страницаПуни преглед - О овој књизи
| Sewell Ford - 1906 - 364 страница
...SCRIBNER'S SONS 1906 COPYRIGHT, 1906, BY , ^ v CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS Published, October, 1908 JC / have, eaten your bread and salt, I have drunk your...watched beside, And the lives that ye led were mine. 226367 —KIPUNG. CONTENTS FAOI TKUEGATE OP MOGADOR 1 Of SUCH As SPIN Nor 29 THE KING GANDEB OF SEA... | |
| 1906 - 810 страница
...would say, "Fate cannot harm me, — I have dined to-day,',' SYDNEY SMITH, Recipe for Salad Salt, — I have eaten your bread and salt, I have drunk your water and wine, The deaths ye d1ed I have watched beside, And the lives that ye led were mine, KIPLING, Departmental Ditties, Prelude,... | |
| 1906 - 504 страница
...that I was the principal object of his thought. He seemed to know just how I felt and 'to say, — "I have eaten your bread and salt, I have drunk your water and wine, The deaths you have died I have watched beside And the lives you led were mine." lation : the patient's and his... | |
| 1907 - 132 страница
...Departmental Ditties. Every one knows the three introductory stanzas, which commence with the words I have eaten your bread and salt, I have drunk your water and wine. These verses were written by Kipling at the special request of Mr. WT Spink, to take the place of the... | |
| Patrick Fennell - 1907 - 436 страница
...rail, who can best understand them, thes< lines are inscribed by one of their number. THE AUTHOR. ' "I have eaten your bread and salt, I have drunk your water and wi:ic, The deaths ye died I have watched beside, And the lives ye led were mine. I have written the... | |
| Edward Farley Oaten - 1908 - 240 страница
...level of excellence. 169 CHAPTER VIII Rudyard Kipling as an Anglo-Indian Man of Letters — Conclusion I have eaten your bread and salt, I have drunk your water and wine; The deaths that ye died I have watched beside, And the lives that ye led were mine. Was there aught that I did... | |
| Edgar Jay Sherman - 1908 - 380 страница
...judgment. You might very well say as Kipling did to his kinsfolk in India on leaving: "I have tasted your bread and salt, I have drunk your water and wine, The deaths ye have died I have watched beside, And the lives ye have lived were mine". As an old Lawrence boy whose... | |
| Edward Farley Oaten - 1908 - 240 страница
...— Conclusion I have eaten your bread and salt, I have drunk your water and wine; The deaths that ye died I have watched beside, And the lives that ye led were mine. Was there aught that I did not share In vigil or toil or ease, — One joy or woe that I did not know,... | |
| Edgar Allen Forbes - 1910 - 430 страница
...and of many steamships — but because I honour you for your great work in a hot and lonely land. " I have eaten your bread and salt, I have drunk your...watched beside, And the lives that ye led were mine." I stand uncovered, here across the leagues of water that breaks in a booming surf on your coast, and... | |
| Margaret Hill McCarter - 1910 - 514 страница
...life-purpose of every member of it, and he could have said, as Kipling wrote of the Hindoo people: I have eaten your bread and salt, I have drunk your...deaths ye died I have watched beside, And the lives ye led were mine. " I never saw a finer young man and woman in my life," he said gently. " I know nothing... | |
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