Conversations at Cambridge..J. W. Parker, 1836 - 292 páginas |
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Página 4
... face ; and , in fact , it only amounts to saying , —that Coleridge was not Johnson . He was equally ad- mirable , in a different manner . There is nothing in Boswell finer than the comparison of Kean's unequal acting to reading ...
... face ; and , in fact , it only amounts to saying , —that Coleridge was not Johnson . He was equally ad- mirable , in a different manner . There is nothing in Boswell finer than the comparison of Kean's unequal acting to reading ...
Página 7
... face of chaos lay ; Mounting this way , I reached the lightsome sky , And saw the beauteous world before me lie . The fresh creation looked all charming , mild , And all the flowery face of Nature smiled . What odours , such as heavenly ...
... face of chaos lay ; Mounting this way , I reached the lightsome sky , And saw the beauteous world before me lie . The fresh creation looked all charming , mild , And all the flowery face of Nature smiled . What odours , such as heavenly ...
Página 10
... faces shall be looking upon you . " He has here dashed out with a few strokes of his pen , a picture of almost Miltonic grandeur . The next is of a different character : - " When God seeth an hypocrite , he will pull his vizard from his ...
... faces shall be looking upon you . " He has here dashed out with a few strokes of his pen , a picture of almost Miltonic grandeur . The next is of a different character : - " When God seeth an hypocrite , he will pull his vizard from his ...
Página 22
... faces . " What pen has uttered sweeter things on children , or the delights of the domestic hearth . His sermon on the Marriage - Ring is more beautiful than any pastoral . " No man can tell but he that loves his children , how many ...
... faces . " What pen has uttered sweeter things on children , or the delights of the domestic hearth . His sermon on the Marriage - Ring is more beautiful than any pastoral . " No man can tell but he that loves his children , how many ...
Página 23
... face . You cannot bar my constant feet to trace The woods and lawns , by living streams , at eve ; Let health my nerves and finer fibres brace , And I their toys to the great children leave : Of fancy , reason , virtue , -nought can me ...
... face . You cannot bar my constant feet to trace The woods and lawns , by living streams , at eve ; Let health my nerves and finer fibres brace , And I their toys to the great children leave : Of fancy , reason , virtue , -nought can me ...
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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 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 imagination 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 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 Theorbo thine THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY thou thought tion tree Trinity truth University of Cambridge verses voice walk wander weary WORDSWORTH writing youth