Poems, Volumen2Lawrence & Bullen, 1896 |
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Página viii
... Jonson To Sir Tho . Rowe PAGE ... 43 45 48 53 54 57 60 61 64 65 66 De Libro cum mutuaretur : Doctissimo Amicissimoque v . D. D. Andrews COMMENDATORY VERSES- Upon Mr. Thomas Coryat's Crudities Amicissimo et meritissimo Benj : Jonson : in ...
... Jonson To Sir Tho . Rowe PAGE ... 43 45 48 53 54 57 60 61 64 65 66 De Libro cum mutuaretur : Doctissimo Amicissimoque v . D. D. Andrews COMMENDATORY VERSES- Upon Mr. Thomas Coryat's Crudities Amicissimo et meritissimo Benj : Jonson : in ...
Página 63
... may thy mighty , amazing beauty move Envy in all women , and in all men love ; And so be change and sickness far from thee , As thou by coming near keep'st them from me . 50 60 TO BEN JONSON , 9 NOVEMBRIS , 1603 . IF VERSE LETTERS . 63.
... may thy mighty , amazing beauty move Envy in all women , and in all men love ; And so be change and sickness far from thee , As thou by coming near keep'st them from me . 50 60 TO BEN JONSON , 9 NOVEMBRIS , 1603 . IF VERSE LETTERS . 63.
Página 64
John Donne Edmund Kerchever Chambers. TO BEN JONSON , 9 NOVEMBRIS , 1603 . IF great men wrong me , I will spare myself ; If mean I will spare them . I know the pelf Which is ill - got the owner doth upbraid ; It may corrupt a judge ...
John Donne Edmund Kerchever Chambers. TO BEN JONSON , 9 NOVEMBRIS , 1603 . IF great men wrong me , I will spare myself ; If mean I will spare them . I know the pelf Which is ill - got the owner doth upbraid ; It may corrupt a judge ...
Página 70
... I confess ; The healths , which my brain bears , must be far less ; Thy giant wit o'erthrows me ; I am gone ; And rather than read all , I would read none . AMICISSIMO ET MERITISSIMO BEN . JONSON . In Volponem . 70 DONNE'S POEMS .
... I confess ; The healths , which my brain bears , must be far less ; Thy giant wit o'erthrows me ; I am gone ; And rather than read all , I would read none . AMICISSIMO ET MERITISSIMO BEN . JONSON . In Volponem . 70 DONNE'S POEMS .
Página 71
John Donne Edmund Kerchever Chambers. AMICISSIMO ET MERITISSIMO BEN . JONSON . In Volponem . QUOD arte ausus es hic tua , Poeta , Si auderent hominum Deique juris Consulti , veteres sequi aemularierque , O omnes saperemus ad salutem ...
John Donne Edmund Kerchever Chambers. AMICISSIMO ET MERITISSIMO BEN . JONSON . In Volponem . QUOD arte ausus es hic tua , Poeta , Si auderent hominum Deique juris Consulti , veteres sequi aemularierque , O omnes saperemus ad salutem ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Addl beasts beauty Ben Jonson body Boulstred colour confess Coryat's Crudities COUNTESS OF BEDFORD court dare dead death Donne Donne's dost doth dwell earth edition Elegy Epigrams Epitaph eyes fair faith fear fire foes give God's gone grace Grosart hadst Harl hath heart heaven honour Ignatius his Conclave John Donne Jonson king Lady leave letter live Lord Lord Harrington love's Macaron mistress Muse ne'er never omits poem Poet Polesworth praise Prince printed prison rich saints SATIRE SATIRE IV SATIRE VI scape shalt ship Sir Henry Goodyere Sir Henry Wotton songs soul stay strange T. C. Dublin tears thee thine things thou art thou hast Thou know'st thoughts thyself tomb true Twickenham unto verses virtue Walton Poole whores wilt wise wouldst write ΙΟ
Pasajes populares
Página 304 - Christ was the word that spake it, He took the bread and brake it, And what that word did make it, That I believe and take it.
Página 111 - And new philosophy calls all in doubt ; The element of fire is quite put out ; The sun is lost, and th' earth, and no man's wit Can well direct him where to look for it. And freely men confess that this world's spent, When in the planets, and the firmament 210 They seek so many new ; they see that this Is crumbled out again to his atomies. 'Tis all in pieces, all coherence gone, All just supply, and all relation.
Página 188 - May all be bad ; doubt wisely ; in strange way To stand inquiring right, is not to stray ; To sleepe, or runne wrong, is.
Página 237 - Of my anniversaries, the fault that I acknowledge in myself, is to have descended to print anything in verse, which, though it have excuse in our times, by men who profess and practise much gravity ; yet I confess I wonder how I declined to it, and do not pardon myself.
Página 274 - No broken vows dwell here, nor pale-faced fears ; Then here I'll sit, and sigh my hot love's folly, And learn to affect a holy melancholy : And if contentment be a stranger then, I'll ne'er look for it but in heaven again.
Página 110 - ... ancients seemed to prophesy, Wh.Ts they called virtues by the name of she ; - She, in whom virtue was so much refined, ' That for allay unto so pure a mind She took the weaker sex ; she that could drive The poisonous tincture, and the stain of Eve...
Página 135 - Her pure and eloquent blood Spoke in her cheeks, and so distinctly wrought, That one might almost say her body thought.
Página 122 - For her death wounded it. The world contains Princes for arms and counsellors for brains, Lawyers for tongues, divines for hearts, and more, The rich for stomachs, and for backs the poor; The officers for hands, merchants for feet, By which remote and distant countries meet: But those fine spirits, which do tune and set This organ, are those pieces which beget Wonder and love ; and these were she : and she Being spent, the world must needs decrepit be.
Página 306 - MY HEART. THOU sent'st to me a heart was sound, I took it to be thine ; But when I saw it had a wound, I knew that heart was mine.
Página 97 - I can do in verse; you know my uttermost when it was best, and even then I did best when I had least truth for my subjects. In this present case there is so much truth as it defeats all poetry.