Although this is the latest in publication of our poet's works, it sounds as if it were written years ago, before he had attained the mastery so evident in The Widow in the Bye Street.
Knowing Mr. Masefield from The Everlasting Mercy and The Widow in the Bye Street, it would have been safe to prophesy in advance that his own Enoch would not show the self-restraint practised by the Tennysonian hero.
When we are reading The Widow in the Bye Street we realize that Mr. Masefield has studied with some profit the art of narrative verse as displayed by Chaucer.
Now if I could have only one of Mr. Masefield's books, I would take The Widow in the Bye Street.
Down Bye Street, in a little Shropshire town, There lived a widow with her only son: She had no wealth nor title to renown, Nor any joyous hours, never one.
I have been told on good authority that of all his writings Mr. Masefield prefers Nan, The Widow in the Bye Street, and The Everlasting Mercy.
All rights reserved Second Thousand TO MY WIFE I Down Bye Street, in a little Shropshire town, There lived a widow with her only son: She had no wealth nor title to renown, Nor any joyous hours, never one.
The Widow in theBye Street' first appeared in The English Review for February 1912.
Weel, that's bye ony wye,' says he, and somebody cries for a speech.
I wonder if you ever heard tell of 'the bye Jarge,'" I said suddenly.
It is explained in three words, to wit, 'the bye Jarge.
I mean that to-night 'the bye Jarge' has a chance to make a new beginning, a chance to become the man his father always thought he would be.
Yet, and I noticed it was always towards the end of his second tankard, the old man would lose the thread of his story, whatever it might be, and take up the topic of "The Bye Jarge.
And byeand bye, try to believe that although one cannot make the unreal real, still there are some foolish people that think they can--and be kind to such people.
The sunset, bye and bye, and then the early shadows, crept up the trail behind the lonely woman plodding along; they seemed to swallow her, and only her quick breathing marked her going.
He'll think, bye and bye, that he's gone into partnership with God in giving Syl and her art to the world!
The widow who lived in thebye street and the painter who was killed at sea are not as important persons as the Hon.
It was "The Widow in the Bye Street" that told us that a great new ship was in port.
Down Bye street, in a little Shropshire town, There lived a widow with her only son: She had no wealth nor title to renown, Nor any joyous hours, never one.
In passing, I may say that the strangeness of the manner in which Nausicaa says good bye to Ulysses is one of the many things which convince me that the Odyssey has never been recast by a later hand.
Pisistratus answered that this was impossible; it was still dark, and they must say good bye to Menelaus, who, if Telemachus would only wait, would be sure to give them a present.
At present she is left rather as a ragged edge, and says goodbye to Ulysses in Book viii.
Besides, they ought to say good bye to Menelaus, and get a present out of him; he will be sure to give them one, if Telemachus will not be in such an unreasonable hurry.
Our good host, grasping our hands, said that he had been much pleased with our visit, and hoped to see us again, and when I bid good bye to the pretty Miss P.
We are now out, and so goodbye to Cape Disappointment and the Columbia, and now for home, dear home again!
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "bye" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.