More favour than you wot of. Mark the end. The Font did only, what was old, renew : The Caldron suppled, what was grown too hard : The Thorns did quicken, what was grown too dull : All did but strive to mend, what you had marr'd. Wherefore be cheer'd,... The note book of a country clergyman - Seite 6von Samuel Wilberforce (bp. of Winchester.) - 1833 - 302 SeitenVollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| James Boyd White - 1994 - 316 Seiten
...to mend, what you had marr'd. Wherefore be cheer'd, and praise him to the full Each day, each houre, each moment of the week, Who fain would have you be new, tender, quick. But the speaker does not recognize what the interlocutor tells him, except in a dull and perfunctory... | |
| Cristina Malcolmson - 1999 - 324 Seiten
...mend, what you had marr'd. Wherefore be cheer 'd, and praise him to the full Each day, each houre, each moment of the week, Who fain would have you be new, tender, quick. (61-70) This reanimation of the heart bears an unclear relationship to the acts of service initiated... | |
| Helen Vendler - 2005 - 118 Seiten
...to mend, what you had marr'd. Wherefore be cheer'd, and praise him to the full Each day, each houre, each moment of the week, Who fain would have you be new, tender, quick. [129-31] This Friend — so understanding yet so certain in his interpretations — answers the narrator's... | |
| 376 Seiten
...thorns did quicken what was grown too dull : All did but strive to mend what you had marr'd. Wherefore be cheer'd, and praise him to the full Each day, each...week, Who fain would have you be new, tender, quick." CHAPTER XX. The former subject continued — The neutral style, or that common to Prose and Poetry,... | |
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