The Works of John Dryden: Now First Collected ...W. Miller, 1808 |
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Sida xxxiii
... fires bete . And if ye wol not so , my lady swete ! Than pray I you to - morwe with a spere , That Arcita me thurgh the herte bere ; VOL . XII . Than rekke I not when I have lost my lif CHAUCER'S KNIGHTES TALE . xxxiii.
... fires bete . And if ye wol not so , my lady swete ! Than pray I you to - morwe with a spere , That Arcita me thurgh the herte bere ; VOL . XII . Than rekke I not when I have lost my lif CHAUCER'S KNIGHTES TALE . xxxiii.
Sida xxxiv
... lost my lif Though that Arcita win hire to his wif . This is the effecte and ende of my praiere , Yeve me my love , thou blissful lady dere ! When the orison was don of Palamon , His sacrifice he did , and that anon . Ful pitously ...
... lost my lif Though that Arcita win hire to his wif . This is the effecte and ende of my praiere , Yeve me my love , thou blissful lady dere ! When the orison was don of Palamon , His sacrifice he did , and that anon . Ful pitously ...
Sida xlv
... lost and all ago ; Only the intellect , withouten more , That dwelled in his herte sike and sore , Gan faillen whan the herte felt deth ; Dusked his eyen two , and failled his breth : But on his ladie yet cast he his eye ; His laste ...
... lost and all ago ; Only the intellect , withouten more , That dwelled in his herte sike and sore , Gan faillen whan the herte felt deth ; Dusked his eyen two , and failled his breth : But on his ladie yet cast he his eye ; His laste ...
Sida lv
... lost myn herte and all my I cannot love a coward by my faith ; For certes , what so any woman saith , We al desiren , if it mighte be , love : To have an husbond hardy , wise , and free , And secree , and non niggard ne no fool , Ne him ...
... lost myn herte and all my I cannot love a coward by my faith ; For certes , what so any woman saith , We al desiren , if it mighte be , love : To have an husbond hardy , wise , and free , And secree , and non niggard ne no fool , Ne him ...
Sida lxxvi
... lost the beauty of their fresh collours . For shronke with hete the ladies eke to brent , That they ne wist where they them might bestow , The knightis swelt , for lack of shade nie shent , And aftir that within a litil throw The wind ...
... lost the beauty of their fresh collours . For shronke with hete the ladies eke to brent , That they ne wist where they them might bestow , The knightis swelt , for lack of shade nie shent , And aftir that within a litil throw The wind ...
Andra upplagor - Visa alla
The Works of John Dryden: Now First Collected ... John Dryden,Walter Scott Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1808 |
The Works of John Dryden: Now First Collected in Eighteen Volumes, Volym 12 John Dryden,Walter Scott Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1821 |
The Works of John Dryden: Now First Collected in Eighteen Volumes, Volym 12 John Dryden,Walter Scott Fragmentarisk förhandsgranskning - 1821 |
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Achilles Ajax anon Arcite arms bear betwixt blood breast Ceyx Chaunteclere Chryseis Cinyras command courser cried crime death doun dremes earth Emelie Eurytion eyes face fair fame fate father fear fight fire flame force goddess gods goth grace Grecian grene gret grete ground hand hast hath heaven Hector herte hire hond honour Iphis Jove joys king kiss labours lady light live lord lover Lucretius maid mede mind Mopsus mordre mortal Myrrha never night numbers nymph o'er Ovid pain Palamon Pindar Pirithous poet prayer Priam quene quod rage sayde sayn seas shal shalt shuld sight sire slain sorwe soul sterte stood swiche synalepha tears Thebes thee Theocritus ther Theseus thilke thing thou thought translation trewe Trojan Troy unto Venus verse Virgil whan wind wold words wound wretched yere youth
Populära avsnitt
Sida 350 - Happy the man - and happy he alone He who can call today his own, He who, secure within, can say 'Tomorrow, do thy worst, for I have lived today: Be fair or foul or rain or shine, The joys I have possessed in spite of Fate are mine: Not Heaven itself upon the Past has power, But what has been has been, and I have had my hour.
Sida 18 - No man is capable of translating poetry who, besides a genius to that art, is not a master both of his author's language, and of his own ; nor must we understand the language only of the poet, but his particular turn of thoughts and expression, which are the characters that distinguish, and, as it were, individuate him from all other writers.
Sida 215 - Then let not piety be put to flight, To please the taste of glutton appetite ; But suffer inmate souls secure to dwell, Lest from their seats your parents you expel j With rabid hunger feed upon your kind, Or from a beast dislodge a brother's mind.
Sida lxxxiii - Thropes and bernes, shepenes and dairies, This maketh that ther ben no faeries : For ther as wont to walken was an elf, Ther walketh now the limitour himself, In undermeles and in morweninges, And sayth his Matines and his holy thinges, As he goth in his limitatioun.
Sida 274 - From this sublime and daring genius of his, it must of necessity come to pass that his thoughts must be masculine, full of argumentation, and that sufficiently warm. From the same fiery temper proceeds the loftiness of his expressions and the perpetual torrent of his verse, where the barrenness of his subject does not too much constrain the quickness of his fancy.
Sida 74 - The Northern breath, that freezes floods, he binds, With all the race of cloud-dispelling winds ; The South he loosed, who night and horror brings, And fogs are shaken from his flaggy wings.
Sida 77 - Mounts through the clouds, and mates the lofty skies. High on the summit of this dubious cliff, Deucalion wafting, moor'd his little skiff. He with his wife were only left behind Of perish'd man; they two were human kind.
Sida 126 - And looks and thinks they redden at the kiss: He thought them warm before: nor longer stays, But next his hand on her hard bosom lays: Hard as it was, beginning to relent, It...
Sida 273 - Lucretius (I mean of his soul and genius) is a certain kind of noble pride and positive assertion of his opinions. He is everywhere confident of his own reason, and assuming an absolute command, not only over his vulgar reader, but even his patron Memmius. For he is always bidding him attend as if he had the rod over him, and using a magisterial authority while he instructs him.
Sida 342 - So may the auspicious Queen of Love, And the Twin Stars, the seed of Jove, And he who rules the raging wind, To thee, O sacred ship, be kind ; And gentle breezes fill thy sails, s Supplying soft Etesian gales : As thou, to whom the Muse commends The best of poets and of friends, Dost thy committed pledge restore...