Chrysomela; a Selection from the Lyrical Poems of Robert HerrickMacmillan and Company, 1892 - 199 páginas |
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Página v
... natural gifts to mastery over his beautiful art : and , from this happy union , unlike the majority of his coriemporaries , he may be still listened to with 3781 3 1872 b ACT -7 1908 233474 pleasure as a true living voice , after the lapse.
... natural gifts to mastery over his beautiful art : and , from this happy union , unlike the majority of his coriemporaries , he may be still listened to with 3781 3 1872 b ACT -7 1908 233474 pleasure as a true living voice , after the lapse.
Página vi
Robert Herrick Francis Turner Palgrave. pleasure as a true living voice , after the lapse of more than two centuries . Nor , unless I greatly overrate the value of his verse , will future ages willingly let it die , whilst the love of ...
Robert Herrick Francis Turner Palgrave. pleasure as a true living voice , after the lapse of more than two centuries . Nor , unless I greatly overrate the value of his verse , will future ages willingly let it die , whilst the love of ...
Página vii
Robert Herrick Francis Turner Palgrave. These reasons , to which , as a pleasure to myself I must add your own pure taste and ability in art , have made me desirous to dedicate my book to you . It is not , indeed , a moment specially ...
Robert Herrick Francis Turner Palgrave. These reasons , to which , as a pleasure to myself I must add your own pure taste and ability in art , have made me desirous to dedicate my book to you . It is not , indeed , a moment specially ...
Página ix
... facsimile as that last indicated would have claims irresistible ; but if the first and last object of this , as of the other Fine Arts , may be defined in language borrowed from a different range of thought , as ' the greatest pleasure.
... facsimile as that last indicated would have claims irresistible ; but if the first and last object of this , as of the other Fine Arts , may be defined in language borrowed from a different range of thought , as ' the greatest pleasure.
Página x
... pleasure which poetry may confer . A writer is most thoroughly to be judged by the whole of what he printed . A selector inevitably holds too despotic a position over his author . The frankness of speech which we have abandoned is an ...
... pleasure which poetry may confer . A writer is most thoroughly to be judged by the whole of what he printed . A selector inevitably holds too despotic a position over his author . The frankness of speech which we have abandoned is an ...
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Amarillis Anacreon ANTHEA Baiae BARLEY-BREAK beauty Ben Jonson bring ye love CANDLEMAS canst Catullus Chor colours cowslips crown'd Daffadils dead doth drink ears Edited eyes F. T. PALGRAVE fair Fairy fancy farewell fear feast fire flowers FRANCIS TURNER PALGRAVE frankincense fresh give grace Grosart hair hand heart HEIR OF REDCLYFFE hence Herrick Hesperides honour JOHN WICKS Jonson Julia keep kiss leave lilies lips live LORD TENNYSON lost Love's Lyrical Poems maids meat Mirt mirth Mirtillo MISTRESS ne'er night numbers o'er once Perilla piece pity poetry poets pretty primrose ROBERT HERRICK roses Saint Selected and arranged shew sing sleep smiling soft song spice spring stay Sweet Spirit tears tell thee there's thine things thou art thou dost thou hast thou shalt tomb tree turn'd unto verse virgins wassail weep wine youth