A Pageant of Elizabethan Poetry |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 32
Page
... , how men would love if they might and how they would have women be ; and then the dispraise of love , which is the slave's homage of revolt , and the scornful weighing and valuing of women , which is mostly disappointed hope , and the.
... , how men would love if they might and how they would have women be ; and then the dispraise of love , which is the slave's homage of revolt , and the scornful weighing and valuing of women , which is mostly disappointed hope , and the.
Page
Arthur Symons. women , which is mostly disappointed hope , and the hate which is itself a form of love ; and then love- poems , a multitude , and of all moods , beginning with Sidney , the great love - poet of that age , and ending with ...
Arthur Symons. women , which is mostly disappointed hope , and the hate which is itself a form of love ; and then love- poems , a multitude , and of all moods , beginning with Sidney , the great love - poet of that age , and ending with ...
Page 3
... hope doth bear ? 2. And who can hope that feels despair ? All . As without breath no pipe doth move , No music kindly without love . Sidney . 6 A Song to the Maskers Come down and dance ye in the toil Of pleasure to a heat ; But if to ...
... hope doth bear ? 2. And who can hope that feels despair ? All . As without breath no pipe doth move , No music kindly without love . Sidney . 6 A Song to the Maskers Come down and dance ye in the toil Of pleasure to a heat ; But if to ...
Page 32
... hope of new delight : And bidding the old adieu , his passed date Bids all old thoughts to die in dumpish spright : And , calling forth out of sad winter's night Fresh Love , that long hath slept in cheerless bower , Wills him awake ...
... hope of new delight : And bidding the old adieu , his passed date Bids all old thoughts to die in dumpish spright : And , calling forth out of sad winter's night Fresh Love , that long hath slept in cheerless bower , Wills him awake ...
Page 37
... hope of orphans and unfathered fruit ; For summer and his pleasures wait on thee , And , thou the away , very birds are mute ; Or , if they sing , ' t is with so dull a cheer That leaves look pale , dreading the winter's near ...
... hope of orphans and unfathered fruit ; For summer and his pleasures wait on thee , And , thou the away , very birds are mute ; Or , if they sing , ' t is with so dull a cheer That leaves look pale , dreading the winter's near ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Anonymous Barnabe Barnes beauty beauty's behold Ben Jonson birds breath bright bring Campion Carmela Charon Claia Corydon cuckoo Daffodil dead dear death delight desire Donne dost doth Drayton earth echo ring eyes fair Fairy fairy-queen fear fire flowers fools give Golden slumbers gone grace grief hair hath hear heart heaven Heigh-ho Herrick Hey-ho honour keep King kiss leave light little boy live livës joy look love's lovers lullaby maids merry Mertilla mind ne'er never Nicholas Breton night numbers nymphs Oberon passion Perigot Perilla Philomel Phyllida pleasure poem poor praise pretty Proserpina Queen Queen Mab quoth roses scorn Shakespeare shepherd shine Sidney sighs sight sing sleep smile song sonnets soul spring stay sweet tears tell thee thine things thou art thou hast thou shalt thoughts true love unto wanton weep Whilst Willy wilt wind youth
Popular passages
Page 164 - THRICE toss these oaken ashes in the air, Thrice sit thou mute in this enchanted chair ; And thrice three times tie up this true-love's knot, And murmur soft — ' She will, or she will not.' Go burn these poisonous weeds in yon blue fire, These screech-owl's feathers and this prickling briar ; This cypress gathered at a dead man's grave ; That all thy fears and cares an end may have. Then come, you fairies, dance with...