Cyclopædia of English Literature: A History, Critical and Biographical, of British Authors, from the Earliest to the Present Times, Bind 1Robert Chambers J.B. Lippincott and Company, 1867 |
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Side 39
... nature ? ' Or are ye god Cupidis own princess , And comin are to loose me out of band ? Or are ye very Nature the goddess , That have depainted with your heavenly hand , This garden full of flowers as they stand ? What shall I think ...
... nature ? ' Or are ye god Cupidis own princess , And comin are to loose me out of band ? Or are ye very Nature the goddess , That have depainted with your heavenly hand , This garden full of flowers as they stand ? What shall I think ...
Side 46
... nature hath lost the mould , Where she her shape did take ; Or else I doubt if nature could So fair a creature make . She may be well compared Unto the Phoenix kind , Whose like was never seen or heard , That any man can find . In life ...
... nature hath lost the mould , Where she her shape did take ; Or else I doubt if nature could So fair a creature make . She may be well compared Unto the Phoenix kind , Whose like was never seen or heard , That any man can find . In life ...
Side 50
... nature has her taught , the noble queen , The field been clothit in a new array ; A lusty life in Lovis service been . 1 Ne'er sweeter noise was heard with living man , Na made this merry gentle Nightingale ; Her sound went with the ...
... nature has her taught , the noble queen , The field been clothit in a new array ; A lusty life in Lovis service been . 1 Ne'er sweeter noise was heard with living man , Na made this merry gentle Nightingale ; Her sound went with the ...
Side 67
... nature changed her course in his beginning , which , in the course of his life , many things unnaturally committed ... nature teaches us to delight , a pleasure . And thus they cautiously limit pleasure only to those appetites to which ...
... nature changed her course in his beginning , which , in the course of his life , many things unnaturally committed ... nature teaches us to delight , a pleasure . And thus they cautiously limit pleasure only to those appetites to which ...
Side 68
... nature of other things , so neither can it change the nature of pleasure . They reckon up several sorts of these pleasures , which they call true ones ; some belong to the body , and others to the mind . The pleasures of the mind lie in ...
... nature of other things , so neither can it change the nature of pleasure . They reckon up several sorts of these pleasures , which they call true ones ; some belong to the body , and others to the mind . The pleasures of the mind lie in ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
afterwards appear beauty Ben Jonson blank verse blood breast breath Cædmon Cæsar called Charles II court death delight divine doth Dr Johnson drama Dryden Earl earth England English eyes Faery Queen fair fame fancy father fear fire flowers frae genius gentle give glory grace hand happy hath hear heart heaven Henry VIII honour Hudibras Jeremy Taylor Jonson king labour lady language learning light live look Lord Macbeth marriage mind muse nature never night noble nymph o'er passion play pleasure poem poet poetical poetry poor praise prince published Queen reign rich Scotland Shakspeare shew sing sleep song soul speak Spenser spirit St Serf style sweet taste tell thee thine things thou hast thought tongue truth unto verse virtue wind wine words write youth