"Fetch out no shroud for Johnny..." | |
"Is it the low rustling of the rushes, the strange will-o'-the-wisp lights, the silence which prevails on calm nights, or is it the still mists which hang over the surface like a shroud." | |
"My face covered up by this endless blue shroud. | |
"Should he come here again, I can at least cover him with a shroud." | |
"The winds aloud howl o'er the masts. And sing through every shroud. | |
"Fetch out no shroud for Johnny..." | |
"Is it the low rustling of the rushes, the strange will-o'-the-wisp lights, the silence which prevails on calm nights, or is it the still mists which hang over the surface like a shroud." | |
"My face covered up by this endless blue shroud. | |
"Should he come here again, I can at least cover him with a shroud." | |
"The winds aloud howl o'er the masts. And sing through every shroud. | |
"Marriages and shrouds are made in Heaven". | |
"The smoke shrouds the eyes." | |
# Your cuffs become my shrouds | |
- The robes are what they call angel shrouds. | |
- Up the shrouds. | |
"Marriages and shrouds are made in Heaven". | |
"The smoke shrouds the eyes." | |
# Your cuffs become my shrouds | |
- The robes are what they call angel shrouds. | |
- Up the shrouds. | |
"It shrouded oft our martyred dead..." | |
"on a dock at Lake Truesdale, "behind the tree-shrouded stone cottage he once shared with his wife Kathleen." | |
# The people's flat is deepest red # It shrouded oft our martyr'd dead # And ere their limbs were stiff and cold | |
'The sun's face is now completely shrouded by the moon. | |
(NISS) "It shrouded oft our martyred dead..." | |
As Crassus obscures all he has done, shrouding his moves in deception. | |
By shrouding himself, he sows discord amongst us. | |
Dust and gas shrouding us | |
Failing. He protected me from the virus by shrouding me in his smoke. | |
I call it that because I don't believe in shrouding our organs in mysterious names. | |
"It shrouded oft our martyred dead..." | |
"on a dock at Lake Truesdale, "behind the tree-shrouded stone cottage he once shared with his wife Kathleen." | |
# The people's flat is deepest red # It shrouded oft our martyr'd dead # And ere their limbs were stiff and cold | |
'The sun's face is now completely shrouded by the moon. | |
(NISS) "It shrouded oft our martyred dead..." | |
As Crassus obscures all he has done, shrouding his moves in deception. | |
By shrouding himself, he sows discord amongst us. | |
Dust and gas shrouding us | |
Failing. He protected me from the virus by shrouding me in his smoke. | |
I call it that because I don't believe in shrouding our organs in mysterious names. | |