Seventeenth-century Verse and Prose |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 48
Page 24
The music stands in its own ligious history , starred with allegorical fig- beauty , as an independent statement of the ures and with personifications marking the theme ( though often onomatopoetic ) , the good and evil involved in it ...
The music stands in its own ligious history , starred with allegorical fig- beauty , as an independent statement of the ures and with personifications marking the theme ( though often onomatopoetic ) , the good and evil involved in it ...
Page 378
Meet you her my wishes , Be speake " her to my blisses , And bee yee callid my absent kisses . 50 Whose native Ray , Can tame the wanton Day 50 Of Gems , that in their bright shades play . I wish her Beauty , That owes not all his Duty ...
Meet you her my wishes , Be speake " her to my blisses , And bee yee callid my absent kisses . 50 Whose native Ray , Can tame the wanton Day 50 Of Gems , that in their bright shades play . I wish her Beauty , That owes not all his Duty ...
Page 461
The Wilder flow'rs , and gives them names : But only with the Roses playes ; Mean time , whilst every verdant thing And them does tell It self does at thy Beauty charm , What Colour best becomes them , and what Reform the errours of the ...
The Wilder flow'rs , and gives them names : But only with the Roses playes ; Mean time , whilst every verdant thing And them does tell It self does at thy Beauty charm , What Colour best becomes them , and what Reform the errours of the ...
What people are saying - Write a review
Reviews aren't verified, but Google checks for and removes fake content when it's identified
LibraryThing Review
User Review - kylljoi - LibraryThingSometimes I have to dig around to find what I want, because there is a tuck fun of work stuffed int his volume. I've had this book for years. I received it in a book walk at UTEP when I was around 11 ... Read full review
Contents
The Seventeenth Century 16001660 | 1 |
A Selected List of Books on the Background and the Literature of the First | 29 |
John Donne | 71 |
Copyright | |
25 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
appear beauty better body bright bring cause Church common Court creatures death delight desire divine doth earth English eyes face fair faith fall fear fire fish give glory grace grow hand hast hath head heart heaven Herbert himselfe hope keep kind King knowledge learned leave lesse light lines live look Lord Master mean mind nature never night once passe persons pleasure poems poetry Poets poor present reason rest rise seems selfe sense sight sing Song soule speake spirit spring stand sure sweet tell Text thee thine things thou thought tion true truth turn unto verse vertue whole wise write