| English poets - 1801 - 488 páginas
...they ever rise again ? " Let then no doubt, Celinda, touch, " Much less your fairest mind invade : " Were not our souls immortal made, " Our equal loves can make them such." The following Epitaph on himself (which is not noticed in Walpole's Life of Lord Herbert) is too characteristic... | |
| George Ellis - 1803 - 474 páginas
...they ever rise again ? " Let then no doubt, Celinda, touch, " Much less your fairest mind invade : " Were not our souls immortal made, " Our equal loves can make them such." The following Epitaph on himself (which is not noticed in Walpole's Life of Lord Herbert) is too characteristic... | |
| Edward Herbert (1st baron.) - 1809 - 356 páginas
...should they ever rise again ? Let then no doubt, Cdiiula, touch, Much less your fairest mind invade : Were not our souls immortal made, Our equal loves can make them such." TO A YOUNG PALE BEAUTY. From thy pale look, while angry Love doth seem With more imperiousness to give... | |
| Edward Herbert Baron Herbert of Cherbury - 1826 - 398 páginas
...should they ever rise again? " Let then no doubt, Celinda, touch, Much less your fairest mind invade: Were not our souls immortal made, Our equal loves can make them such." TO A YOUNG PALE BEAUTY. From thy pale look, while angry Love doth seem With more imperiousness to give... | |
| John Heneage Jesse - 1840 - 492 páginas
...should they ever rise again ? Let then no doubt, Celinda, touch, Much less your fairest mind invade ; Were not our souls immortal made, Our equal loves can make them such.* There were many contradictions in Lord Herbert's character. " The same man," observes Granger, was... | |
| 1841 - 500 páginas
...should they ever rise aguin? Let then no doubt, Celinda, touch, Much less your fairest mind invade; Were not our souls immortal made, Our equal loves can make them such. There were many contradictions in Lord Herbert's character. "The same man," observes Granger, " was... | |
| Margaret Fuller, Ralph Waldo Emerson, George Ripley - 1844 - 556 páginas
...wife as she looked out from the Tower window to see him for the last time on his way to execution. " He stood up in the cart, waved his hat, and cried,...immortal made, Our equal loves can make them such." In Spain the same thought is arrayed in a sublimity, which belongs to the sombre and passionate genius... | |
| Margaret Fuller, Ralph Waldo Emerson, George Ripley - 1844 - 556 páginas
...idolatry," because it was religious. The meeting of two such souls Donne describes as giving birth to an ii abler soul." Lord Herbert wrote to his love, " Were...immortal made. Our equal loves can make them such." In Spain the same thought is arrayed in a sublimity, which belongs to the sombre and passionate genius... | |
| Sarah Margaret Ossoli (march.) - 1845 - 224 páginas
...love, to Heaven, and leave you in the storm !" because it was religious. The meeting of two such sonls Donne describes as giving birth to an " abler soul."...beautiful picture of what these relations should be in their purity. Her life cannot sustain the violation of what she so clearly felt. Shakespeare, too,... | |
| Ralph Waldo Emerson - 1874 - 584 páginas
...Shall with us everjasting be. Let then no doubt, Celinda. touch, Much less your fairest mind invade; Were not our souls immortal made, Our equal loves can make them EUTHANASIA. Bur souls that of his own good life partake, He loves as his own self; dear as his eye... | |
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