Specimens of the early English poets [ed. by G. Ellis.]. To which is prefixed an historical sketch of the rise and progress of the English poetry and language. By G. Ellis, Volumen31801 |
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Página 14
... poor wretch , Into this unhappy error : Which to plague , no tyrant's mind . Pain can find Like my heart's self - guilty terror . Then , O then ! let that suffice , Your dear eyes Need not , need not more afflict me : Nor your sweet ...
... poor wretch , Into this unhappy error : Which to plague , no tyrant's mind . Pain can find Like my heart's self - guilty terror . Then , O then ! let that suffice , Your dear eyes Need not , need not more afflict me : Nor your sweet ...
Página 50
... poor fools that long to prove . " Tell me more , are women true ? " Yes , some are , and some as you . Some are willing , some are strange , Since you men first taught to change ; And till troth Be in both , All shall love , to love ...
... poor fools that long to prove . " Tell me more , are women true ? " Yes , some are , and some as you . Some are willing , some are strange , Since you men first taught to change ; And till troth Be in both , All shall love , to love ...
Página 52
... her sweet tongue , If these no other joys imply ? A golden gyve , a pleasing wrong . To be your own but one poor month , I'd give My youth , my fortune , and then leave to live . FRANCIS BEAUMONT . A CHARM . [ From his Poems [ 52 ]
... her sweet tongue , If these no other joys imply ? A golden gyve , a pleasing wrong . To be your own but one poor month , I'd give My youth , my fortune , and then leave to live . FRANCIS BEAUMONT . A CHARM . [ From his Poems [ 52 ]
Página 61
... poor man ; the Nimrod fierce is Death ; His speedy greyhounds are Lust , sickness , envy , care , Strife , that ne'er falls amiss , With all those ills that haunt us while we breathe . Now , if by chance we fly Of these the [ 61 ]
... poor man ; the Nimrod fierce is Death ; His speedy greyhounds are Lust , sickness , envy , care , Strife , that ne'er falls amiss , With all those ills that haunt us while we breathe . Now , if by chance we fly Of these the [ 61 ]
Página 69
... poor thought of her would arm me So as Circe could not harm me . Since , beside those excellencies , Wherewith others please the senses , She , whom I have praised so , Yields delights for reason too . Who could doat on thing so common ...
... poor thought of her would arm me So as Circe could not harm me . Since , beside those excellencies , Wherewith others please the senses , She , whom I have praised so , Yields delights for reason too . Who could doat on thing so common ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Admet Anon Beaumont and Fletcher beauty beauty's birds blush born breast breath Carew CASTARA Celia Charles II chaste cheek Chloris court Cupid dear death delight died disdain dost doth earth Edgar Atheling English eyes face fair fancy fate fear flame flowers folly FRANCIS BEAUMONT grace Greensleeves grief happy hath hear heart heaven hope Isaac Walton John Hall joys Julius Cæsar king kiss Laius language lips live lord lov'd love's lover maid MATTHEW STEVENSON melancholy miscellany mistress morn muse ne'er never night nymph o'er Oxford pain is love passion Phillis Picts pleasure poems poet poetry pride printed Prithee reign rose Saxon scorn Shakspeare shew sigh sing smile SONG SONNET sorrow soul specimen spring stanzas swain sweet taste tears tell thee thine thing thou art thought wanton Whilst wind wings wouldest not love youth