The Complete Poems of Sir Philip Sidney, Band 3Chatto and Windus, 1877 |
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adopt Trin Arcadia Astrophel and Stella beasts beauty bide bird-lime blessed blisse coupled ioyes maintaine craue cryes delight dimme dolefull tunes doth eares earth Ev'n evill eyes faire Farewell farr feare foes gaue giue glory God's grace graue griefe hand hate hath haue heare heart heavnly Hymen King leaue lift vp light lines liue long their coupled Lord loue margin-note mercy Mopsa neuer never offrings paine prayse president bookes PSALM quoth reads saue selfe selues shalt shame shee shepheard shew Sidney Sidney's sight sing Sir Philip Sidney song Sonnet sorrow soul sprite staind stanza strength Sunne Sweet Lord text and Davies Thee Therfore thing thinke Thou art Thou dost Thou hast thoughts Thy face Thyne tongue Trinity College trust unto verses vnto vpon vpright wayling wicked wilt Woodford words wretch yeeld ΙΟ
Beliebte Passagen
Seite ii - Early English Poets. Edited, with Introductions and Annotations, by Rev. AB GROSART. "Mr. Grosart has spent the most laborious and the most enthusiastic care...
Seite ii - Davies' (Sir John) Complete Poetical Works, including Psalms I. to L. in Verse, and other hitherto Unpublished MSS., for the first time Collected and Edited, with MemorialIntroduction and Notes, by the Rev. AB GROSART, DD Two Vols., crown 8vo, cloth boards, 12s.
Seite ii - Complete Collected Poems. With Memorial-Introduction and Notes, Steel Portrait, Index of First Lines, and Glossarial Index, &c. Three Vols. 4. Sidney's (Sir Philip) Complete Poetical Works, including all those in "Arcadia.
Seite 203 - Capcase halfe open, or looke as demurely as a sixpenny browne loafe, for he hath some imperfections that do keepe him fro the comon Councel : yet of many he is deemed a very vertuous meber, and one of the honestest sort of men...
Seite 7 - Virtue, (if not a god) yet God's chief part, Be thou the knot of this their open vow, That still he be her head, she be his heart, He lean to her, she unto him do bow: Each other still allow:* Like oak and mistletoe, Her strength from him, his praise from her do grow. In which most lovely train,* O Hymen, long their coupled joys maintain.
Seite 202 - I feare I shall be counted a mercenary flatterer, for mixing my thoughts with such figuratiue admiration, but generall report that surpasseth my praise, condemneth my rhetoricke of dulnesse for so colde a commendation.
Seite 203 - I shoulde say). Now euery man is not of that minde; for some, to goe the lighter away, will take in their fraught of spangled feathers, golden Peebles, Straw, Reedes, Bulrushes, or anything, and then they beare out their sayles as proudly, as if they were balisted with Bulbiefe.
Seite 204 - ... fill all the world with the wilde fowle of good wits ; I can tell you this is a harder thing then making golde of quick siluer, and will trouble you more then the morrall of Msops Glow-worme hath troubled our English Apes...
Seite 59 - Begun by the Noble and Learned Gent., Sir Philip Sidney, Knt. and finished by the Right Honorable the Countess of Pembroke, his Sister.
Seite 24 - Lanquet, the shepheard best swift Ister knewe, For clerkly reed, and hating what is naught, For faithfull hart, cleane hands, and mouth as true : With his sweet skill my skillesse youth he drewe, To have a feeling tast of him that sifts Beyond the heaven, far more beyond your witts.