The uncompleted edition of Wither's poems, ed. by J.M. Gutch. 4 vols, 第 1 卷1820 |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 49 筆
第 x 頁
... bear the name . It is a spring of knowledge that imparts A thousand several sciences and arts , A pure , clear fount , whose water is by odds Far sweeter than the nectar of the gods ; Or rather ( truly to entitle it ) It is the ...
... bear the name . It is a spring of knowledge that imparts A thousand several sciences and arts , A pure , clear fount , whose water is by odds Far sweeter than the nectar of the gods ; Or rather ( truly to entitle it ) It is the ...
第 xxviii 頁
... alone Too huge to be perform'd by any one , But more than all the world can well dispatch ; Look what I could by observation catch , And my weak memory well bear away I tegist'red against another day . Nor will I aught xxviii .
... alone Too huge to be perform'd by any one , But more than all the world can well dispatch ; Look what I could by observation catch , And my weak memory well bear away I tegist'red against another day . Nor will I aught xxviii .
第 11 頁
... bears them headlong by untam'd affection . " Counsel's in vain ; cause when this fit doth take them , Reason and understanding both forsake them ; It makes them sometimes merry , sometimes sad ; Untam❜d men mild , and many a mild man ...
... bears them headlong by untam'd affection . " Counsel's in vain ; cause when this fit doth take them , Reason and understanding both forsake them ; It makes them sometimes merry , sometimes sad ; Untam❜d men mild , and many a mild man ...
第 30 頁
... bear them causeless malice , yet can I. Their hearts are ill , and it is seldom known That a sweet brook from bitter springs hath flown . There's some , too , when they see a man re- spected , Though they are nothing by that means ...
... bear them causeless malice , yet can I. Their hearts are ill , and it is seldom known That a sweet brook from bitter springs hath flown . There's some , too , when they see a man re- spected , Though they are nothing by that means ...
第 31 頁
... bear as bad a mind . But let us for their true conversion pray , For never age could this more justly say , Truth hatred gets , ( she of such gain is sped ) While love and charity to Heaven are fled . Again , the wicked hate beyond all ...
... bear as bad a mind . But let us for their true conversion pray , For never age could this more justly say , Truth hatred gets , ( she of such gain is sped ) While love and charity to Heaven are fled . Again , the wicked hate beyond all ...
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常見字詞
abuse amiss aught base behold brave bring cause choler confess conscience creature dare delight devil discommend doth e'en e'er envy esteem evil fame fault fear fools for't forc'd fortunes foul friends gain GEORGE WITHER give glory God's hate hath hear heart honest honor hope hostler humour idle is't keep lest live look man's means men's mind mischiefs muse ne'er never nought offend pain passion peradventure pleasure poison'd poor presumption proud reason ribaldry rich SATIRE SATIRE IV scape scarce scorn scurvy seek shame shew soul Spain speak spite spleen strange report such-like suppose sure swear tell thee there's thine things thou hast thought true truth twas twere twill Tyburn unto vanity vile villany virtue vulgar weak wealth whilst wise wond'rous worth wrong Zounds
熱門章節
第 420 頁 - No fancies hatched in my own weak brain, Nor private spirits ; but am ruled by The Scriptures, and that church authority, Which with the ancient faith doth best agree ; But new opinions will not down with me. When I would learn I never greatly care, So truth they teach me, who my teachers...
第 401 頁 - Yet I confess, in this my pilgrimage, I like some infant am of tender age. For as the child who from his father hath...
第 409 頁 - For many books I care not, and my store Might now suffice me, though I had no more Than God's two Testaments, and then withal That mighty volume which the world we call...
第 371 頁 - That can provide an hour's sad talk in prose For any funeral, and then go dine, And choke my grief with sugar-plums and wine. I cannot at the claret sit and laugh, And then, half tipsy, write an epitaph. I cannot for reward adorn the hearse Of some old rotten miser with my verse ; Nor, like the poetasters of the time, Go howl a doleful elegy in rhyme For every lord or ladyship that dies, And then perplex their heirs to patronise My muddy poesy.
第 402 頁 - One while my ways are pleasant unto me, Another while as full of cares they be. I doubt and hope, and doubt and hope again, And many a change of passion I sustain In this my journey, so that now and then I lost, perhaps, may seem to other men. Yea, to myself awhile, when sins impure Do my Redeemer's love from me obscure. But whatsoe'er betide, I know full well, My Father, who above the clouds doth dwell, An eye upon his wandering child doth cast, And he will fetch me to my home at last.
第 x 頁 - I did, as other idle freshmen do, Long to go see the Bell of Osney too ; And yet for certainty I cannot tell That e'er I drank at Aristotle's Well : And that perhaps may be the reason why I know so little in Philosophy." 1 From such pursuits,2 and "the Tennis-ball," at which he "achieved some cunning," his tutor (whether Warner or some other) summoned him to work.
第 401 頁 - Here goes, there runs, and yon amazed stays ; Then cries, and straight forgets his care, and plays ; Then, hearing where his loving father calls, Makes haste, but, through a zeal ill-guided, falls ; Or runs some other way, until that he (Whose love is more than his endeavours be), To seek the wanderer, forth himself doth come, And take him in his arms, and bear him home. So in this life, this grove of Ignorance, As to my homeward I myself advance, Sometimes...
第 285 頁 - Weakness and ignorance have wronged it sore ; But what need any man therein speak more Than divine Sidney hath already done ? For whom, though he deceased ere I begun, I have oft sighed, and bewailed my fate, That brought...
第 447 頁 - My mind's my kingdom, and I will permit No other's will to have the rule of it. For I am free ; and no man's power, I know, Did make me thus, nor shall unmake me now.
第 201 頁 - Beef, mutton, lamb, or such like butchers' meat, If that they cannot feed of capon, swan, Duck, goose, or common household poultry ; then Their store-house will not very often fail To yield them partridge, pheasant, plover, quaile, Or any dainty...