English Critical Essays (sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Eighteenth Centuries).Edmund David Jones Oxford University Press, 1952 - 394 Seiten |
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Seite 340
... seems hardly worth the study that it costs , yet it must be valued as a proof of a mind at once subtle and com- prehensive : In open prospect nothing bounds our eye , Until the earth seems join'd unto the sky : So in this hemisphere our ...
... seems hardly worth the study that it costs , yet it must be valued as a proof of a mind at once subtle and com- prehensive : In open prospect nothing bounds our eye , Until the earth seems join'd unto the sky : So in this hemisphere our ...
Seite 341
... seems to have been peculiarly formed : Let envy then those crimes within you see , From which the happy never must be free ; Envy that does with misery reside , The joy and the revenge of ruin'd pride . Into this poem he seems to have ...
... seems to have been peculiarly formed : Let envy then those crimes within you see , From which the happy never must be free ; Envy that does with misery reside , The joy and the revenge of ruin'd pride . Into this poem he seems to have ...
Seite 350
... seems to look round him for images which he cannot find , and what he has he distorts by endeavouring to enlarge them . He is , he says , petrified with grief ; but the marble sometimes relents , and trickles in a joke : The sons of art ...
... seems to look round him for images which he cannot find , and what he has he distorts by endeavouring to enlarge them . He is , he says , petrified with grief ; but the marble sometimes relents , and trickles in a joke : The sons of art ...
Inhalt
SIR PHILIP SIDNEY 155486 | 1 |
THOMAS CAMPION 15671620 | 55 |
SAMUEL DANIEL 15621619 | 61 |
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