Shakespeare's Sonnets - the Problems Solved: A Modern Edition with Prose Versions, Introduction and NotesMacmillan, 1973 - 319 頁 Using evidence he recently found in manuscripts at Oxford, Mr. Rowse gives us a new edition which makes clear the whole story of the sonnets. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 32 筆
第 xxxvii 頁
... clear that he did : Was it his spirit , by spirits taught to write Above a mortal pitch , that struck me dead ? No , neither he , nor his compeers by night Giving him aid , my verse astonished . He , nor that affable familiar ghost ...
... clear that he did : Was it his spirit , by spirits taught to write Above a mortal pitch , that struck me dead ? No , neither he , nor his compeers by night Giving him aid , my verse astonished . He , nor that affable familiar ghost ...
第 73 頁
... clear fountains mud . Clouds and eclipses darken both sun and moon , and in the sweetest bud there may be canker . Everybody commits faults , and even I in this , justifying your fault by producing parallels , myself corrupting you by ...
... clear fountains mud . Clouds and eclipses darken both sun and moon , and in the sweetest bud there may be canker . Everybody commits faults , and even I in this , justifying your fault by producing parallels , myself corrupting you by ...
第 89 頁
... clearly directed in the dark . And you , whose image makes darkness bright , how would your form itself show happy in clear daylight when to closed eyes your shade shines so ! How blessed should I be to look on you in the living day ...
... clearly directed in the dark . And you , whose image makes darkness bright , how would your form itself show happy in clear daylight when to closed eyes your shade shines so ! How blessed should I be to look on you in the living day ...
常見字詞
A. L. ROWSE beauty beauty's better breath Dark Lady dead dear death doth E. K. Chambers Elizabethan Emilia eyes fair false favour feeling foll Forman give grace grief hast hate hath heart heaven hell Hero and Leander honour Hyder Rollins kind Lanier leave lines literary live look Lord Chamberlain Lord Chamberlain's Love's Labour's Lost Lucrece Marlowe married means Midsummer Night's Dream mind Muse nature never night older painting phrase pity pleasure poem poet's poor praise proud recognise refers relationship reproach rival poet Romeo and Juliet Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's Sonnets sight sonnet Southampton sequence speare's spirit steal summer tells thee theme thine things thou art thought thy love thy sweet thyself Time's tongue true truth turn Venus and Adonis verse William Shakespeare winter woman word worth write written young patron youth