| Frederick Tupper - 1914 - 502 páginas
...hard rugged image melt him down. And mould him In what softer form he pleased. Vent. Him would I ice; that man of all the world; Just such .a one we want. Ant. He loved me too; I was hi* soul; he lived not but in me: We were so closed within each other's breasts, Toe rivets were not... | |
| Arthur Woollgar Verrall - 1914 - 322 páginas
...wax; From that hard rugged image melt him down, And mould him in what softer form he pleas'd. Vent. Him would I see ; that man of all the world ; Just such a one we want. Ant. He lov'd me too; I was his soul ; he liv'd not but in me : We were so clos'd within each other's breasts,... | |
| Frederick Tupper - 1914 - 480 páginas
...rugged image melt him down, And mould him in what softer form he pleased. on, ACT III, Sc. I. Vent. Him would I see; that man of all the world; Just such a one we want. .-hit. He loved me too; I was his soul; he lived not but in me: We were so closed within each other's... | |
| William Wycherley, William Congreve, Thomas Otway, George Farquhar, Sir John Vanbrugh, John Dryden - 1925 - 396 páginas
...wax, From that hard rugged image melt him down, And mould him in what softer form he pleased. Vent. Him would I see; that man, of all the world; Just...each other's breasts, The rivets were not found, that joined us first. That does not reach us yet: we were so mixt, As meeting streams, both to ourselves... | |
| George William McClelland - 1925 - 1180 páginas
...wax, From that hard rugged image melt him down, And mould him in what softer form he pleas'd. Vent. lov'd me too; I was his soul; he liv'd not but in me: We were so clos'd within each other's breasts,... | |
| George William McClelland - 1925 - 1178 páginas
...such a one we want. Ant. He lov'd me too; I was his soul; he liv'd not but in me: We were so clos'd ange t That does not reach us yet: we were so mixt, As meeting streams, both to ourselves were lost; We were... | |
| John Dryden - 1972 - 188 páginas
...From that hard, rugged image melt him down, And mold him in what softer form he pleased. VENTIDIUS. Him would I see, that man of all the world; Just such a one we want. ANTONY. He loved me too: 90 I was his soul, he lived not but in me. We were so closed within each other's... | |
| William Shakespeare - 2001 - 636 páginas
...Wax, From that hard rugged Image, melt him down, And mould him in what softer form he pleas' d. Ven. Him would I see ; that man of all the world : Just such a one we want. Ant. He lov'd me too, I was his Soul ; he liv'd not but in me : We were so clos'd within each others brests,... | |
| David M. Halperin - 2002 - 236 páginas
...i677 drama on a Roman theme by Dryden, All for Love, Antony can say about his noble friend Dolabella: I was his soul, he lived not but in me. We were so...each other's breasts, The rivets were not found that joined us first. [Compare Montaigne's "Our souls mingle and blend with each other so completely that... | |
| |