Prison Books and Their Authors |
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Page 23
... heart , and from the life ; When the fenfuous is laid low Through the spirit's holy strife ; * * * " From this fpirit - land afar , All disturbing force shall flee , Strife , nor toil , nor hope shall mar Its immortal unity . " With ...
... heart , and from the life ; When the fenfuous is laid low Through the spirit's holy strife ; * * * " From this fpirit - land afar , All disturbing force shall flee , Strife , nor toil , nor hope shall mar Its immortal unity . " With ...
Page 38
... hearts for forrow bleed , Awaked , when their fault they find : In loathfome vice each drunken wight , To ftir to God , this was my mind . Thy windows had done me no spight ; But proud people that dread no fall , Clothed with falsehood ...
... hearts for forrow bleed , Awaked , when their fault they find : In loathfome vice each drunken wight , To ftir to God , this was my mind . Thy windows had done me no spight ; But proud people that dread no fall , Clothed with falsehood ...
Page 42
... hearts With chere , as though one should another whelm , Where we have fought , and chased oft with darts , With filver drops the mead yet spread for ruth , In active games of nimbleness and strength , Where we did ftrain , trained with ...
... hearts With chere , as though one should another whelm , Where we have fought , and chased oft with darts , With filver drops the mead yet spread for ruth , In active games of nimbleness and strength , Where we did ftrain , trained with ...
Page 46
... heart , " is a beautiful inftance of his love for Nature , and the grace and flow of his verfification . It is too long to quote entire ; but the following paffage will amply bear out our remarks : - “ The fun , when he hath spread his ...
... heart , " is a beautiful inftance of his love for Nature , and the grace and flow of his verfification . It is too long to quote entire ; but the following paffage will amply bear out our remarks : - “ The fun , when he hath spread his ...
Page 50
... topics , and the earnestnefs with which he dwells upon them , thofe fine qualities of the judgment and the heart which united the poets in a bond of fympathy and affection . " * We now give the elegy thus 50 The Earl of Surrey .
... topics , and the earnestnefs with which he dwells upon them , thofe fine qualities of the judgment and the heart which united the poets in a bond of fympathy and affection . " * We now give the elegy thus 50 The Earl of Surrey .
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Common terms and phrases
Æneid againſt alfo almoſt alſo anſwer beauty becauſe beſt bleffed Boëthius Bunyan cauſe Cervantes Chriftian circumſtances courſe death defire devil Don Quixote doth Engliſh eyes faid faith fame fatire fays feemed fent fentence feven fhall fing firſt fome fong foon forrow foul ftill fubject fuch fuffering genius greateſt hath heart himſelf hiſtory honour houſe itſelf John Bunyan juſtice laft laſt Leigh Hunt liberty live Lord Lovelace maſter mind moft moſt muſt myſelf never night noble paffage paffed paffions paſs perfecution perfons philofopher pleaſant pleaſure poem poet poetry praiſe preſent priſon publiſhed puniſhment Purgatory of Suicides queſtion raiſe Raleigh reſpect Richard Lovelace Robert Southwell ſaid ſay ſcene ſeems ſeen ſhall ſhe ſhould ſhow ſome Southwell ſpeak ſpirit ſtate ſtill ſtrong ſuch Surrey ſweet thee themſelves theſe things thofe thoſe thou thought thouſand uſed verſe whofe whoſe wife witneſs