By absence this good means I gain, That I can catch her, Where none can watch her, In some close corner of my brain; There I embrace and kiss her, And so I both enjoy and miss her. The Loves of the Poetsавторы: Richard Le Gallienne - 1911 - Страниц: 273Полный просмотр - Подробнее о книге
| Francis Turner Palgrave - 1921 - Страниц: 168
...Beyond time, place, and mortality. 10 To hearts that cannot vary Absence is present, Time doth tarry. By absence this good means I gain, That I can catch her, Where none can match her, 15 In some close corner of my brain : There I embrace and kiss her ; And so I both enjoy... | |
| Algernon de Vivier Tassin - 1923 - Страниц: 456
...Beyond time, place, and all mortality. To hearts that cannot vary Absence is Presence, Time doth tarry. By absence this good means I gain, That I can catch...embrace and kiss her; And so I both enjoy and miss her. ANONYMOUS 99. SELF INTEREST UNIVERSAL IN PUBLIC AFFAIRS comes intent upon his particular interest;... | |
| Francis Turner Palgrave - 1924 - Страниц: 774
...time, place, and all mortality. 10 To hearts that cannot vary Absence is Present, Time doth tarry. By absence this good means I gain, That I can catch her, Where none can watch her, 15 In some close corner of my brain : There I embrace and kiss her ; And so I both enjoy and miss her.... | |
| Norman Ault - 1928 - Страниц: 566
...Redoubled in her secret notions : Like rich men that take pleasure In hiding more than handling treasure. By absence this good means I gain, That I can catch...embrace and kiss her, And so I both enjoy and miss her. Donne (?) or Hosldnt (?) * A Poetical Rhapsody, 1602. Lady, you are with beauties so enriched LADY,... | |
| Ashley Horace Thorndike - 1928 - Страниц: 640
...her to your golden remembrance. There is an old English song — older, sir, than the Pilgrims: — By absence, this good means I gain, That I can catch...embrace and kiss her: And so I both enjoy and miss her! You must not forget, Mr. President, in eulogizing the early men of New England, who are your clients... | |
| Henry Ten Eyck Perry - 1918 - Страниц: 358
...Harington (Cambridge History, IV, 209). Of his lady-love he writes : By absence jj,is good means ig^ That I can catch her, Where none can watch her, In...of my brain ; There I embrace and kiss her And so enjoy her, and none miss her. 3 M. fimile Montegut with a truly Gallic point of view imagines that... | |
| William Makepeace Thackeray - 1876 - Страниц: 802
...the literal duplicate of that whimsical unknown rbapsodist who wrote of his own similar situation — By absence this good means I gain, That I can catch...brain ; There I embrace and kiss her ; And so I both possess and miss her. organist, never very vigilant at the best of times. He would stand and look fixedly... | |
| Dorothy Richardson Jones - 1992 - Страниц: 410
...now I gain ... That I can catch her When no one can watch her In some close corner of my brain. Now I embrace and kiss her and so I both enjoy and miss her. He may never have wanted more than this. Certainly he made no real effort to have the physical reality.... | |
| Gary Fredric Waller - 1993 - Страниц: 344
...rich men that take pleasure In hidinge more then handling treasure. By absence this good means I gaine That I can catch her Where none can watch her In some close corner of my braine: There I embrace and there kiss her, And so enjoye her, and so miss her. (Bodleian Eng. poet,... | |
| Daniel Fischlin - 1998 - Страниц: 418
...ofAyres (1600), possibly written by John Hoskins. I quote the final stanza: By Absence, this good meanes I gain, That I can catch her, Where none can watch her, In some close corner of my braine, There I embrace and kisse her, And so I both enioy and misse her.71 The poet's sense of the... | |
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