The Poetical Rhapsody: To which are Added, Several Other Pieces, Том 1W. Pickering, 1826 |
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... Eye 141 Upon her hiding her Face from him 142 Upon her Beauty and Inconstancy ibid . A Dialogue between a Lover's Flaming Heart and his Lady's Frozen Breast 142 For what cause he obtains not his Lady's favour 144 145 A Quatrain Sonnet ...
... Eye 141 Upon her hiding her Face from him 142 Upon her Beauty and Inconstancy ibid . A Dialogue between a Lover's Flaming Heart and his Lady's Frozen Breast 142 For what cause he obtains not his Lady's favour 144 145 A Quatrain Sonnet ...
Стр. xvi
... eye - witness of his Lordship's glorious for- tune in this voyage ; but since I was not so happy as to have opportunity to use my unpractised sword in his service , I have employed those weapons which were in my power to use , as my ...
... eye - witness of his Lordship's glorious for- tune in this voyage ; but since I was not so happy as to have opportunity to use my unpractised sword in his service , I have employed those weapons which were in my power to use , as my ...
Стр. xxiii
... eyes and his mind , must starve Query - afford . + This allusion it is difficult to explain otherwise than by supposing that one of the enemies of the Davison family had then been returned as knight of the shire for Cambridgeshire , or ...
... eyes and his mind , must starve Query - afford . + This allusion it is difficult to explain otherwise than by supposing that one of the enemies of the Davison family had then been returned as knight of the shire for Cambridgeshire , or ...
Стр. xxvi
... eyes ; reading story , and policy ; observing what I hear and see ; and , which is the greatest labour , to dispose all of it so as other men may under- stand of my knowledge , and find that perhaps in half an hour that cost me half a ...
... eyes ; reading story , and policy ; observing what I hear and see ; and , which is the greatest labour , to dispose all of it so as other men may under- stand of my knowledge , and find that perhaps in half an hour that cost me half a ...
Стр. xxvii
... eyes , both for the general reverence of your sometime respected and honored person , and particular respect which is to be used to a loving and grave father , and indiscreet , considering the peril that letters are subject unto , I ...
... eyes , both for the general reverence of your sometime respected and honored person , and particular respect which is to be used to a loving and grave father , and indiscreet , considering the peril that letters are subject unto , I ...
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The Poetical Rhapsody: To which are Added, Several Other Pieces, Том 1 Francis Davison Полный просмотр - 1826 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
appear appointed ASTREA Bacon beauty breast brother Burleigh Christopher Davison Countess Court cries dear death desire died doth Dyer's Earl of Essex earth ECLOGUE England erst eyes fair father favour flock Fortune Francis Davison friends Fulke Greville give grace grant Gray's Inn grief hands Harl hath Hatton heart Henry Constable honor hope JOHN DONNE King lament Lee Priory Edition Leicester letter live Lord Lord Leicester Lordship MAID Majesty manuscript married merit mind Muses never night nought P.W. Relatione pain Pembroke PERIN PIERS pipe poems poet POETICAL RHAPSODY poor praise Prince printed Queen Elizabeth RHAPSODY Secretary Davison shepherds sighs sight sing Sir Edward Dyer Sir Egerton Brydges Sir John Sir Philip Sydney Sir Walter Raleigh song Sonnets soon Spenser spring sweet tears Tell thee THENOT thine thou unto virtue WALTER DAVISON WIDOW wife William Davison woes wont words wretched write written
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Стр. 25 - Say to the court, it glows, And shines like rotten wood; Say to the church, it shows What's good, and doth no good. If church and court reply, Then give them both the lie. Tell potentates they live Acting by others' action; Not loved unless they give, Not strong but by a faction.
Стр. 27 - Tell zeal it wants devotion, Tell love it is but lust, Tell time it is but motion, Tell flesh it is but dust ; And wish them not reply, For thou must give the lie. Tell age it daily wasteth ; Tell honour how it alters ; Tell beauty how she blasteth ; Tell favour how it falters : And as they shall reply, Give every one the lie.
Стр. 28 - Tell arts they have no soundness, But vary by esteeming ; Tell schools they want profoundness, And stand too much on seeming : If arts and schools reply, Give arts and schools the lie.
Стр. 21 - Wedlock indeed hath oft compared been To public feasts, where meet a public rout, Where they that are without would fain go in, And they that are within would fain go out. Or to the jewel which this virtue had, That men were mad till they might it obtain ; But when they had it, they were twice as mad Till they were dispossessed of it again.
Стр. 26 - Their purpose is ambition, Their practice only hate. And if they once reply, Then give them all the lie. Tell...
Стр. xc - tis my John-a-Combe." But the sharpness of the satire is said to have stung the man so severely, that he never forgave it. He died in the fifty-third year of his age, and was buried on the north side of the chancel, in the great church at Stratford, where a monument is placed in the wall. On his grave-stone underneath is, " Good friend, for Jesus' sake forbear " To dig the dust inclosed here.
Стр. 26 - Who, in their greatest cost, seek nothing but commending ; And if they make reply, then give them all the lie. Tell Zeal it wants devotion ; tell Love it is but lust ; Tell Time it is but motion ; tell Flesh it is but dust ; And wish them not reply, for thou must give the lie.
Стр. 37 - Forth flew the shaft, and pierc'd his heart, '^ That to the ground he fell with pain : Yet up again forthwith he start, And to the nymph he ran amain.
Стр. 100 - Exspuit una duos tussis, et una duos. Jam secura potes totis tussire diebus, Nil istic quod agat tertia tussis babel.
Стр. 37 - There come, he steals her shafts away, And puts his own into their place ; Nor dares he any longer stay, But, ere she wakes, hies thence apace. Scarce was he...