Poems, Nide 2Clarendon Press, 1958 - 2104 sivua |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 85
Sivu 556
... leave ' em off . Never content , with what you had before ; But true to Change , and English Men all ore . New Honour calls you hence ; and all your Care Is to provide the horrid pomp of War : In Plume and Scarf , Jack - boots and Bilbo ...
... leave ' em off . Never content , with what you had before ; But true to Change , and English Men all ore . New Honour calls you hence ; and all your Care Is to provide the horrid pomp of War : In Plume and Scarf , Jack - boots and Bilbo ...
Sivu 597
... leave my Truth , ( to make his Plot more clear , ) To Mr. Fuller , when he next shall swear . I give my Judgment , craving all your Mercyes , To those that leave good Plays , for damn'd dull Farces . My small Devotion let the Gallants ...
... leave my Truth , ( to make his Plot more clear , ) To Mr. Fuller , when he next shall swear . I give my Judgment , craving all your Mercyes , To those that leave good Plays , for damn'd dull Farces . My small Devotion let the Gallants ...
Sivu 855
... leaves this Noble Age . He leaves you first , all Plays of his Inditing , The whole Estate , which he has got by ... leave you , An Old Man may at least good wishes give you . Your Beauty names the Play ; and may it prove , To each ...
... leaves this Noble Age . He leaves you first , all Plays of his Inditing , The whole Estate , which he has got by ... leave you , An Old Man may at least good wishes give you . Your Beauty names the Play ; and may it prove , To each ...
Sisältö
The Hind and the Panther Text from the first edition 1687 A collated with the second | 499 |
A SONG FOR ST CECILIAS DAY 1687 | 538 |
The Prologue and Epilogue to The History of Bacon in Virginia | 551 |
Tekijänoikeudet | |
12 muita osia ei näytetty
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
amongst Ancient appear Author bear Beauties begin better betwixt born call'd common cou'd Crimes Death Design Earth ev'ry Example Eyes Face fair fall Fate Father fear Fortune Friend gain give given Gods Grace Grecians Ground hand happy Head Heav'n Honour hope Horace Italy Judge Juvenal kind King Learning least leave light living look Lord Love manner Master mean Mind Name Nature never Night Noble once pains Persius Persons plain Play Pleasure Poem Poet Poetry Poor Praise present Publick Reason rest Rich rise Roman Rome Satire Satyr shou'd sing Song sort Soul stand Subject sure thee things thou thought true turn Verse Vices Virgil Virtue whole Wife World wou'd write written young Youth