Die englische Hirtendichtung von 1579-1625: ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der englischen Hirtendichtung

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Niemeyer, 1895 - 114页
 

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第80页 - Song to His Diaphenia Diaphenia, like the daffadowndilly, White as the sun, fair as the lily, Heigh ho, how I do love thee ! I do love thee as my lambs Are beloved of their dams; How blest were I if thou wouldst prove me!
第82页 - Much ado there was, God wot! He would love and she would not. She said, Never man was true; He said, None was false to you.
第80页 - Fair sweet, how I do love thee ! I do love thee as each flower Loves the sun's life-giving power; For dead, thy breath to life might move me. Diaphenia like to all things blessed, When all thy praises are expressed, Dear joy, how I do love thee ! As the birds do love the spring, Or the bees their careful king : Then in requite, sweet virgin, love me ! H.
第4页 - The Sheapheards Kalender hath much Poetrie in his Eglogues : indeede worthy the reading, if I be not deceiued. That same framing of his stile to an old rustick language I dare not alowe, sith neyther Theocritus in Greeke, Virgill in Latine, nor Sanazar in Italian did 2° affect it.
第76页 - On an imitation of it ("Come liue with mee, and be my deere"), also in the Helicon and long included in Sh.'s Poems, see p. 605, below.] The passionate Sheepheard to his loue. Come liue with mee, and be my loue, And we will all the pleasures proue, That Vallies, groues, hills and fieldes, Woods, or steepie mountaine yeeldes.
第55页 - They are more worthy, and ean better tell What rare contents do with a Poet dwell. Then whiles our sheep the short sweet grasse do shere And till the long shade of the hilles appeare We'ele heare them sing, for though the one be young, Neuer was any that more sweetly sung.
第76页 - With coral clasps and amber studs: And if these pleasures may thee move, Come live with me and be my love.
第25页 - I haue a Garden-plot, Wherein there wants nor hearbs, nor roots, nor flowers ; (Flowers to smell, roots to eate, hearbs for the pot,) And dainty Shelters when the Welkin lowers : Sweet-smelling Beds of Lillies and of Roses, Which Rosemary banks and Lauender incloses.
第27页 - Peace, deuoyd of strife ; His thoughts are pure from all impure intent, His Pleasures rate sits at an easie rent : He beares no mallice in his harmles hart, Malicious meaning hath in him no part. He is not troubled with...
第58页 - The Shepherds Hunting: Being, Certaine Eglogs written during the time of the Anthors Imprisonment in the Marshalsey. By George Wither, Gentleman. London, Printed by Thomas Snodham for George Norton, 1615.

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