Elizabethan Verse RomancesMax Meredith Reese Routledge & K. Paul, 1968 - 275 pagina's |
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Pagina 104
... lovers know ; And now the same ' gan so to scorch and glow , As in plain terms , yet cunningly , he crav'd it ; Love always makes those eloquent that have it . She , with a kind of granting , put him by it , And ever as he thought ...
... lovers know ; And now the same ' gan so to scorch and glow , As in plain terms , yet cunningly , he crav'd it ; Love always makes those eloquent that have it . She , with a kind of granting , put him by it , And ever as he thought ...
Pagina 105
... lovers , downward creeps , So that in silence of the cloudy night , Though it was morning , did he take his flight . But what the secret trusty night conceal'd , Leander's amorous habit soon reveal'd ; With Cupid's myrtle was his bonnet ...
... lovers , downward creeps , So that in silence of the cloudy night , Though it was morning , did he take his flight . But what the secret trusty night conceal'd , Leander's amorous habit soon reveal'd ; With Cupid's myrtle was his bonnet ...
Pagina 225
... lovers of their fault . In a fine appreciation of the poem ( English Literature in the Sixteenth Century , pp . 513-16 ) C. S. Lewis calls Chapman's continuation ' essentially . a eulogy of marriage ' . The lovers regard their mutual ...
... lovers of their fault . In a fine appreciation of the poem ( English Literature in the Sixteenth Century , pp . 513-16 ) C. S. Lewis calls Chapman's continuation ' essentially . a eulogy of marriage ' . The lovers regard their mutual ...
Inhoudsopgave
INTRODUCTION page | 1 |
Spenser | 7 |
Scyllas Metamorphosis | 14 |
Copyright | |
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
A. H. Bullen amorous arms beauty beauty's behold birds blood boar breast breath C. S. Lewis chaste chastity cheeks Christopher Marlowe Cupid dainty Daniel dead death delight disdain divine dost doth Drayton earth Elizabethan Endymion Endymion and Phoebe eyes Faerie Queen fair favour fear fire flower Glaucus glory goddess gods golden grief hast hath heart heaven heavenly Hero and Leander honour ivory Jove kiss Latmus light lips live Lodge look lov'd love's lovers lust M. C. Bradbrook Marlowe Marston Metamorphosis mortal Muses myth Nature never night nymphs Ovid Ovidian passion Phoebe pity pleasure poem poet poetry poor Pygmalion queen quoth Rosamond sacred satires scorn Scylla sense Sestos Shakespeare shame shepherds sighs sight sonnets sorrow soul sport stanza stars story sweet tears thee Thetis thine thou thought thyself unto Venus and Adonis wanton Wherein Whilst wind youth Zeus