A Pageant of Elizabethan Poetry |
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Page 13
... thou thing , time past so known , so dear To me as blood to life and spirit ; near , Nay , thou more near than kindred , friend , man , wife , Male to the female , soul to body ; life To quick action , or the warm soft side Of the ...
... thou thing , time past so known , so dear To me as blood to life and spirit ; near , Nay , thou more near than kindred , friend , man , wife , Male to the female , soul to body ; life To quick action , or the warm soft side Of the ...
Page 14
... thou not filled them with thy fire and flame . Phoebean splendour ! and thou , Thespian spring ! Of which sweet swans must drink before they sing Their true paced numbers and their holy lays , Which makes them worthy cedar and the bays ...
... thou not filled them with thy fire and flame . Phoebean splendour ! and thou , Thespian spring ! Of which sweet swans must drink before they sing Their true paced numbers and their holy lays , Which makes them worthy cedar and the bays ...
Page 16
Arthur Symons. Where hast thou been so long from my embraces , Poor pitied exile ? Tell me , did thy graces Fly discontented hence , and for a time Did rather choose to bless another clime ? Or went'st thou to this end , the more to move ...
Arthur Symons. Where hast thou been so long from my embraces , Poor pitied exile ? Tell me , did thy graces Fly discontented hence , and for a time Did rather choose to bless another clime ? Or went'st thou to this end , the more to move ...
Page 19
... thou that art so courteous else to all , Why shouldst thou , Night , abuse me only thus , That every creature to his kind dost call , And yet ' t is thou dost only sever us ? Well could I wish it would be ever day , If , when night ...
... thou that art so courteous else to all , Why shouldst thou , Night , abuse me only thus , That every creature to his kind dost call , And yet ' t is thou dost only sever us ? Well could I wish it would be ever day , If , when night ...
Page 20
... thou art wont to show , With feigned solace ease a true - felt woe ; Or if , deaf god , thou do deny that grace , Come as thou wilt , and what thou wilt bequeath : I long to kiss the image of 31 my Madrigal The ivory , coral , gold , Of ...
... thou art wont to show , With feigned solace ease a true - felt woe ; Or if , deaf god , thou do deny that grace , Come as thou wilt , and what thou wilt bequeath : I long to kiss the image of 31 my Madrigal The ivory , coral , gold , Of ...
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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 lives 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