Seventeenth-century Verse and Prose, Volume 1Macmillan, 1951 |
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Pagina 209
... Kind , or Faire. Let me never taste of gladnesse . If I love not thy mad'st fits , More than all their greatest wits . And though some too seeming holy , Doe account thy raptures folly : Thou dost teach me to contemne , What make Knaves ...
... Kind , or Faire. Let me never taste of gladnesse . If I love not thy mad'st fits , More than all their greatest wits . And though some too seeming holy , Doe account thy raptures folly : Thou dost teach me to contemne , What make Knaves ...
Pagina 219
... kind of understanding is common to man and beast . It yields what Hobbes calls foresight or prudence - in other words , natural wisdom . In the concluding words of Chapter II we are told , however , 10 experience , quicknesse of memory ...
... kind of understanding is common to man and beast . It yields what Hobbes calls foresight or prudence - in other words , natural wisdom . In the concluding words of Chapter II we are told , however , 10 experience , quicknesse of memory ...
Pagina 283
... kind of Snail , or at the black Bee that breeds in clay walls ; and he never refuses a Grasshopper on the top of a swift stream , nor at the bottom the young bumble - bee that breeds in long grasse , and is ordinarily found by the Mower ...
... kind of Snail , or at the black Bee that breeds in clay walls ; and he never refuses a Grasshopper on the top of a swift stream , nor at the bottom the young bumble - bee that breeds in long grasse , and is ordinarily found by the Mower ...
Inhoudsopgave
Lancelot Andrewes | 33 |
Francis Bacon | 43 |
Ben Jonson | 122 |
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Angels Atheisme beauty beleeve body brest bright Christ Church creatures dayes dead death delight divine Donne doth drest E. M. W. Tillyard earth English Envy eyes F. R. Leavis face fair faith farre fear fire flames flowers friends give glasse glory Gondibert grace hast hath heart Heaven Henry Vaughan Herbert holy hope J. B. Leishman John Donne King learned light live look Lord ment metaphysical poets mind Muse Musick Nature ne're never night o're Philosophy Pisc pleasure poems poetry Poets Puritan reason selfe sense shee shew shine sight sing sleep Song soul spirit starr Stars Sunne sweet T. S. Eliot teares tell Text thee thine things thou art thou dost thought tion Trout truth UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN unto Vaughan verse vertue weep wind wings wise