A Selection from the Works of Lord ByronEdward Moxon & Company, 1866 - 244 páginas |
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... hand , the two great opposing figures of Byron and Wordsworth . No man under twenty can just now be expected to appreciate these . The time was when all boys and girls who paddled in rhyme and dabbled in sentiment were wont to adore the ...
... hand , the two great opposing figures of Byron and Wordsworth . No man under twenty can just now be expected to appreciate these . The time was when all boys and girls who paddled in rhyme and dabbled in sentiment were wont to adore the ...
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... hand , the two great opposing figures of Byron and Wordsworth . No man under twenty can just now be expected to appreciate these . The time was when all boys and girls who paddled in rhyme and dabbled in sentiment were wont to adore the ...
... hand , the two great opposing figures of Byron and Wordsworth . No man under twenty can just now be expected to appreciate these . The time was when all boys and girls who paddled in rhyme and dabbled in sentiment were wont to adore the ...
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... hand , the two great opposing figures of Byron and Wordsworth . No man under twenty can just now be expected to appreciate these . The time was when all boys and girls who paddled in rhyme and dabbled in sentiment were wont to adore the ...
... hand , the two great opposing figures of Byron and Wordsworth . No man under twenty can just now be expected to appreciate these . The time was when all boys and girls who paddled in rhyme and dabbled in sentiment were wont to adore the ...
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... hand . His love of wide and tem- pestuous waters fills his work throughout as with the broad breath of a sea - wind . Even the weakest of his poems , a thing stillborn and shapeless , is redeemed and revived by one glorious verse ...
... hand . His love of wide and tem- pestuous waters fills his work throughout as with the broad breath of a sea - wind . Even the weakest of his poems , a thing stillborn and shapeless , is redeemed and revived by one glorious verse ...
Página xx
... hand than his could ever bend that bow , or ever will . Even the Italian poets , working in a language more flexible and ductile than ours , could never turn their native metre to such uses , could never handle their national weapon ...
... hand than his could ever bend that bow , or ever will . Even the Italian poets , working in a language more flexible and ductile than ours , could never turn their native metre to such uses , could never handle their national weapon ...
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Términos y frases comunes
AHOLIBAMAH AMBRACIAN GULF Anah angels appear'd Asmodeus beauty behold beneath blood breast breath brow Byron chain CHILDE HAROLD'S PILGRIMAGE clay clime clouds damn'd dark dead death deep Don Juan dream dust earth EDWARD MOXON EPISTLE TO AUGUSTA eternal eyes face fair father feel flowers foam gazed GIAOUR glory gone grave grew Haidée hand hath heart heaven hell hope hour human clay immortal Japh knew less light live look look'd Michael Molière mortal mountains ne'er never night o'er ocean once pass'd passion Pedrillo perish'd poem poets praise round Saint Peter SAME.-CANTO Samian wine Satan seem'd shore sigh silent skies sleep son of Noah soul spirit STANZAS stars sweet tears thee thine things thou art thought turn'd Twas verse voice walls waters wave weep wind wings young