Sonnets, Selected from English and American AuthorsHoughton Mifflin, 1916 - 113 pagini |
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Pagina xi
... fair one's unreasoning coldness and indifference . In his other poetry , Wyatt can be simple and sincere , but in the sonnets he is usually paraphrasing , or attempting to translate di- rectly , the work of Petrarch , and with ...
... fair one's unreasoning coldness and indifference . In his other poetry , Wyatt can be simple and sincere , but in the sonnets he is usually paraphrasing , or attempting to translate di- rectly , the work of Petrarch , and with ...
Pagina 1
... plain There is written her fair neck round about ; " Noli me tangere ; for Cæsar's I am , And wild for to hold , though I seem tame . " Sir Thomas Wyatt . A VOW TO LOVE FAITHFULLY SET me whereas the sun 1 ENGLISH SONNETS ...
... plain There is written her fair neck round about ; " Noli me tangere ; for Cæsar's I am , And wild for to hold , though I seem tame . " Sir Thomas Wyatt . A VOW TO LOVE FAITHFULLY SET me whereas the sun 1 ENGLISH SONNETS ...
Pagina 3
... fair is built within my mind , In which her glorious image placed is ; On which my thoughts do day and night attend , Like sacred priests that never think amiss ! There I to her , as th ' author of my bliss , Will build an altar to ...
... fair is built within my mind , In which her glorious image placed is ; On which my thoughts do day and night attend , Like sacred priests that never think amiss ! There I to her , as th ' author of my bliss , Will build an altar to ...
Pagina 5
... fair love , and fairer virtue kept , All suddenly I saw the Faery Queen : At whose approach the soul of Petrarch wept , And from thenceforth those graces were not seen ; For they this Queen attended , in whose stead Oblivion laid him ...
... fair love , and fairer virtue kept , All suddenly I saw the Faery Queen : At whose approach the soul of Petrarch wept , And from thenceforth those graces were not seen ; For they this Queen attended , in whose stead Oblivion laid him ...
Pagina 7
... fair my race . Sir Philip Sidney . LEAVE ME , O LOVE , WHICH REACHEST BUT TO DUST LEAVE me , O Love , which reachest but to dust , And thou , my mind , aspire to higher things ; Grow rich in that which never taketh rust : Whatever fades ...
... fair my race . Sir Philip Sidney . LEAVE ME , O LOVE , WHICH REACHEST BUT TO DUST LEAVE me , O Love , which reachest but to dust , And thou , my mind , aspire to higher things ; Grow rich in that which never taketh rust : Whatever fades ...
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