The Poems [of] Christopher MarloweMethuen, 1968 - 271 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 30
Pagina xxxvi
... verse as reverently as ... by the springs of the Thames . " 2 A genuflection in the direction of Marlowe's Lucans First Book is not out of place , for , though Marlowe's achievement in dramatic blank verse is given just prominence , and ...
... verse as reverently as ... by the springs of the Thames . " 2 A genuflection in the direction of Marlowe's Lucans First Book is not out of place , for , though Marlowe's achievement in dramatic blank verse is given just prominence , and ...
Pagina 140
... Verse is immortal , and shall ne'er decay . To verse let kings give place , and kingly shows , 20 25 30 17. be hard ] Dyce ; hoord Mas .; hard Tucker Brooke . 22. Argos ] Mas .; Argo Dyce . 33. To verse let kings give place ] Mas .; Let ...
... Verse is immortal , and shall ne'er decay . To verse let kings give place , and kingly shows , 20 25 30 17. be hard ] Dyce ; hoord Mas .; hard Tucker Brooke . 22. Argos ] Mas .; Argo Dyce . 33. To verse let kings give place ] Mas .; Let ...
Pagina 144
... Verses reduce the horned bloody moon , And call the sun's white horses back at noon . Snakes leap by verse from caves of broken mountains , And turned streams run backward to their fountains . 26 Verses ope doors ; and locks put in the ...
... Verses reduce the horned bloody moon , And call the sun's white horses back at noon . Snakes leap by verse from caves of broken mountains , And turned streams run backward to their fountains . 26 Verses ope doors ; and locks put in the ...
Inhoudsopgave
HERO AND LEANDER I | 4 |
Her than Mas That were as white as is Ish Bind 18 When | 6 |
age at | 27 |
Copyright | |
2 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
amorous arms beauty Bind blood breast Caesar Callimachus Ceres Chapman chaste Christopher Marlowe Compare Hero Compare Ovid's Elegies Corinna death delight dost doth Douce Dyce earth editions ELEGIA Eleius eyes Faerie Queene fair Fates favour fear fire flame Ganymede give goddess gods golden grace hair hand hast hate hath heart heaven Hellespont Hero and Leander Hero's Heroides honour Hymen Jove kiss Latin lest light live looks lov'd love's lovers Lucan maid Marlowe omits Marlowe read Marlowe's text reads Mars Martin Metamorphoses mistress Musaeus Muses Neptune night nought nuptial nymph O.E.D. quotes Ovid Ovid says Pelops Phoebus poem poet Pompey quod reference Rhene Robinson Rome sense Sestiad shalt shame sing soul stars Sulpitius sweet Tamburlaine Tereus thee Thessaly thine things thou thought Thracian Tibullus Tucker Brooke turn'd Venus verse virgin wanton wench winds wound ΙΟ