23 Words to use with pilgrim

[that,] oppressed by the ruthless hand of persecution, our pilgrim fathers, threatened with torture and death, succumbed not to man, but trusting on [in] an almighty arm, braved the dangers of an almost unknown ocean, and threw themselves into the arms of men called savages, who proved more beneficent than national Christians."

E. E. Keister (A); 4Dec72; R540675. <pb id='361.png' n='1972h2/A/3826' /> Land of the pilgrims pride.

In this mountaine is a great den whither the pilgrims resort to make their prayers, and there is a great stone naturally separated in the midst; and they say, that Ismael, while his father Abraham was busie about the sacrifice, tooke the knife in hand to prooue how it would cut, and making triall diuided the stone in two parts.

And at the end of the valley, he saw another pilgrim marching on at some distance before him.

ANSON, PETER F. A pilgrim artist in Palestine.

Your pilgrim home you make, Where the chambers open to sunrise, The mountains and the lake, If the pleasant picture wearies, As the fairest sometimes will, And the weight of the hills lies on you,

Miracles are believed in, holy men are revered as saints, thousands of pilgrims journey on foot every year to Jerusalem, which is to every true believer the centre of the universe and therefore becomes at Easter almost a Russian city.

Rome in her throng'd and stranger-crowded streets, And palaces, where pilgrim pilgrim meets, Holds not, respected Sarah, one that can Revered make the name of Englishman, Or loved, more than thy Kinsman, dear to me

Beneathe an holme, faste by a pathwaie side Which dide unto Seynete Godwine's covent lede, A hapless pilgrim moneynge dyd abide, Pore in his viewe, ungentle in his weede, Longe bretful of the miseries of neede; Where from the hailstone coulde the almer flie?

The hotel garden, filled with guides, horses, donkeys, and pilgrims; the delicate exhibition of ankles and feet such feet; the chairs to help the rotund damsels; the swarm of natives round one especially fat woman, who got down after all; the beaming face of the host, and the gloomy looks of a very fat man, just the size for a small pilgrim tea party; not omitting the priest, whose flowing robe nearly hid his better half (viz.

They said, moreover, that he had made many pilgrims princes, though by nature they were beggars born, and their original had been the dunghill.

His heart was suffused with all he had heard the pilgrims repeat; for the first time it entered his mind that the same stars that he saw twinkling, held their course at that glad time when "the morning-stars sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy,"a prelude to this other song of "the great multitude of the heavenly host."

Many, already, are beautified with flowers and shrubbery; and in some, already arises the marble slab, pointing to the place where some weary pilgrim reposes, free from all the earth calls good or great; for this, too, is enclosed in the Cemetery.

The Haram appeared to have become a vast pool of brown faces and agitated white ihrams (pilgrim robes) of weaving brown hands, of gleaming weapons.

The road between Chatham and Sittingbourne might seem to be unquestionably that by which the pilgrims rode, and as certainly the Roman highway.

"Beyond the sphere that widest orbit hath Passeth the sigh that issues from my heart, While weeping Love doth unto him impart Intelligence which leads him on his path, "When at the wished-for place his flight he stays, A lady he beholds, in honor dight, And shining so, that, through her splendid light, The pilgrim spirit upon her doth gaze.

I felt, as the poet has it, "'A pilgrim stranger here I roam, From place to place I'm driven;

At blush of morn, the silver horn Was loudly blown at the castle gate; And, from the wall, the Seneschal Saw there a weary pilgrim wait.

TO A POET (TO EDMUND GOSSE) Still towards the steep Parnassian way The moon-led pilgrims wend, Ah, who of all that start to-day Shall ever reach the end?

The bank of the river is laid with continuous flights of steps whence the pilgrims bathe; but the city itself is narrow, crocked, crowded, and dirty.

The inns are full; no man will yield This little pilgrim bed; But forced he is with silly beasts In crib to shroud his head.

Thousands of pilgrims flock here every year.

"O friends, the story of this pilgrim hear; That's to say, hear the tale of what has happened to me; How the king of love hath behaved to me, I am going to relate it in full detail, O, hear.

23 Words to use with  pilgrim