| Edmund Spenser - 1914 - 160 páginas
...will breake anew ; And stoutly will that second worke assoyle, With strong endevour and attention dew. Till then give leave to me in pleasant mew To sport my muse, and sing my loves sweet pmise ; The contemplation of whose beavenly hew, My spirit to an higher pitcb will rayse.... | |
| University of Calcutta. Department of Letters - 1920 - 462 páginas
...realisation of a higher entity by the human soul and regards woman's beauty as a step to it. " — give leave to me, in pleasant mew To sport my muse, and sing my loves sweet praise ; The contemplation of whose heavenly hew, My spirit to an higher pilrh will rayse,"... | |
| University of Calcutta. Department of Letters - 1920 - 458 páginas
...realisation of a higher entity by the human soul and regards woman's beauty as a step to it. " — give leave to me, in pleasant mew To sport my muse, and sing my loves sweet praise ; The contemplation of whose heavenly hew, My spirit to an higher pitch will rayse,"... | |
| George Reuben Potter - 1928 - 640 páginas
...Out of my prison I will break anew, And stoutly will that second work assoil, With strong endeavor and attention due. Till then give leave to me, in...raise. But let her praises yet be low and mean, Fit for the handmaid of the Faery Queen. 81 FAIR is my love when her fair golden hairs With the loose wind... | |
| Carl R. Woodring, James Shapiro - 1995 - 936 páginas
...refreshed after toil. Out of my prison I will break anew; And stoutly will that second work assoil, With strong endeavour and attention due. Till then...raise. But let her praises yet be low and mean, Fit for the handmaid of the Faery Queene. Sir Philip Sidney (1 554- 1586) Bom at Penshurst and educated... | |
| Margreta de Grazia, Maureen Quilligan, Peter Stallybrass - 1996 - 422 páginas
...will breake anew: and stoutly will that second worke assoyle, with strong endeavour and attention dew. Till then give leave to me in pleasant mew, to sport my muse and sing my loves sweet praise: the contemplation of whose heavenly hew, my spirit to an higher pitch will rayse.... | |
| Ilona Bell - 1998 - 298 páginas
...that he can rededicate himself "as a steed refreshed after toyle" to her praise: Till then giuc leaue to me in pleasant mew, to sport my muse and sing my loues sweet praise: the contemplation of whose heauenly hew, my spirit to an higher pitch wil rayse.... | |
| Patrick Cheney - 304 páginas
...and, in a passage that echoes this moment on Acidale, takes time out for love: Till then giue leaue to me in pleasant mew, to sport my muse and sing my loues sweet praise: the contemplation of whose heauenly hew, my spirit to an higher pitch will rayse.... | |
| Daniel Juan Gil - 2006 - 206 páginas
...Boyle since he must keep something in reserve for when he returns to praising the queen in her poem: Till then give leave to me in pleasant mew, to sport my muse and sing my loves sweet praise: the contemplation of whose heavenly hew, my spirit to an higher pitch will rayse.... | |
| Henry Allon - 1855 - 728 páginas
...to rest awhile from his Faerie Queen, concluding, — ' Till then, give leave to me in pleasant mood To sport my Muse, and sing my love's sweet praise,...The contemplation of whose heavenly hue My spirit to a higher pitch will raise : But let her praises yet be low and mean, Fit for the handmaid of the Faerie... | |
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