17 collocations for farewells

O farewell grief, and welcome joy, Ten thousand times therefore!

Look, Zenia look, the fleecy clouds move on the western gales, And see the white men's moving home, unfurls her swelling sails, So farewell India's spicy groves, farewell its burning clime, And farewell Zenia, but to love, no farewell can be mine; Not for the brightest Spanish maid, shall Diez' vow be riven, So if we meet no more on earth, I will be thine in heaven.

Written in haste, farewell my cowslip sweet, Pray let's a Sunday at the alehouse meet.

kin I forget thee never farewell farewell farewell.'

O the Oak and the Ash and the bonny Ivy tree, They are all growing green in my North Countrie!" "Then farewell my father, and farewell my mother, Until I do see you I nothing but mourn; Remembering my brothers, my sisters, and others In less than a year I hope to return.

Farewell, farewell the heart that lives alone, Housed in a dream, at distance from the Kind! Such happiness, wherever it be known, 55 Is to be pitied; for 'tis surely blind.

"'Farewell the heath, The forest hoar I played beneath, By streamlet's roar.

Farewell those honours, and farewell with them The hope of such hereafter!

Farewell the world then, farewell the wedded joys Till this I have hop'd for from that gentleman! Scarborow, forgive me; thus thou hast lost thy wife, Yet record, world, though by an act too foul, A wife thus died to cleanse her husband's soul.

One little struggle more, One pang and it is o'er, Then farewell life.

The "Luck of Edenhall" is an ancient decorated glass goblet, which has belonged to the Musgraves time out of mind, and which bears on it the legend: "When this cup shall break or fall, Farewell the luck of Edenhall.

O the Oak and the Ash and the bonny Ivy tree, They are all growing green in my North Countrie!" "Then farewell my father, and farewell my mother, Until I do see you I nothing but mourn; Remembering my brothers, my sisters, and others In less than a year I hope to return.

True, whilst they are free: But power once lost, farewell their sanctity: 'Tis power, to which the gods their worship owe, Which, uncontrouled, makes all things just below: Thou dost the plea of saucy rebels use; They will be judge of what their prince must chuse: Hard fate of monarchs, not allowed to know When safe, but as their subjects tell them so.

"So farewell thou, whom I have known too late To let thee come so near.

"Farewell my wife and children dear God calls you home to rest.

Thou also, Dying Trumpeter!with thy love that was victorious, and thy anguish that was finishing, didst enter the tumult: trumpet and echofarewell love, and farewell anguishrang through the dreadful sanctus.

Fire, water, air, and earth, and force of fates, That governs all, and Heaven that all creates, Nor art, nor nature's hand can ease my grief; Nothing but death, the wretch's last relief: Then farewell youth, and all the joys that dwell, With youth and life, and life itself farewell!

17 collocations for  farewells