Conversations at CambridgeJ.W. Parker, 1836 - 292 páginas |
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Página 20
... then made little progress ; and the knowledge actually acquired only served to kindle the darkness * See Spence's Anecdotes . into a faint and uncertain twilight that magnified every object 20 S. T. COLERIDGE AT TRINITY .
... then made little progress ; and the knowledge actually acquired only served to kindle the darkness * See Spence's Anecdotes . into a faint and uncertain twilight that magnified every object 20 S. T. COLERIDGE AT TRINITY .
Página 21
... darkness ; the thousand thousand accidents in the world , and every contingency to every man and to every creature , doth preach our funeral sermon , and calls us to look how the old sexton , Time , throws up the earth and digs a grave ...
... darkness ; the thousand thousand accidents in the world , and every contingency to every man and to every creature , doth preach our funeral sermon , and calls us to look how the old sexton , Time , throws up the earth and digs a grave ...
Página 22
... darkness , and decline to softness and the symptoms of a sickly age ; it bowed the head , and broke the stalk , and at night , having lost some of its leaves and all its beauty , it fell into the portion of weeds and outworn faces ...
... darkness , and decline to softness and the symptoms of a sickly age ; it bowed the head , and broke the stalk , and at night , having lost some of its leaves and all its beauty , it fell into the portion of weeds and outworn faces ...
Página 36
... dark and inauspicious season ; yet that stream of sweetly - uttered knowledge , to employ his own words , did not flow in vain ; those high - erected thoughts found echoes in other hearts . Of the dignified and Christian strain of his ...
... dark and inauspicious season ; yet that stream of sweetly - uttered knowledge , to employ his own words , did not flow in vain ; those high - erected thoughts found echoes in other hearts . Of the dignified and Christian strain of his ...
Página 44
... how well to me are known Thy boughs by Summer - breezes fanned ; The dark nest where the dove hath flown , The water ruffled by my hand . And here , beneath these solemn bowers , Where Silence 44 THE REMAINS OF A LATE SIZAR .
... how well to me are known Thy boughs by Summer - breezes fanned ; The dark nest where the dove hath flown , The water ruffled by my hand . And here , beneath these solemn bowers , Where Silence 44 THE REMAINS OF A LATE SIZAR .
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Términos y frases comunes
admirable APOLLONIUS RHODIUS arms beauty Ben Jonson bosom bower breath called Cambridge chamber character CHARLES WILKS charm Chaucer Christian College Cowley Cromwell dark death delightful Divine doth EDWARD LYTTON Electra eloquence Euripides eyes face fancy feelings feet flowers garden gathered genius Gondibert grave GRAY hand hath heart heaven honours hope hour Iliad intellect Jeremy Taylor JOHN MOULTRIE Jonson learning light lively look Lord Madeline MASON mathematical melancholy memory Milton mind moral morning mother Muse nature never night noble o'er passage Phædo piety Plato pleasant poem poet poetical poetry Pope praise Price principal charm religion remark scholar Shakspeare shine Sidney sleep song sorrow soul Spenser spirit sweet tears tender thee thine THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY thou thought tion tree truth University of Cambridge verses voice walk wander weary WORDSWORTH writing youth