Seventeenth-century Verse and Prose, Volume 1Macmillan, 1951 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 53
Page 193
... Fair - cruel maid , most cruel , fairer ever , How hath foul rigour stol'n into thy heart ? And on a comick stage hath learnt thee art To play a Tyrant - tragical deceiver ? To promise mercy , but perform it never ? To look more sweet ...
... Fair - cruel maid , most cruel , fairer ever , How hath foul rigour stol'n into thy heart ? And on a comick stage hath learnt thee art To play a Tyrant - tragical deceiver ? To promise mercy , but perform it never ? To look more sweet ...
Page 392
... fair fallacy by thee We are not WHERE nor What we be , But WHAT and WHERE we would be . Thus art thou Our absent PRESENCE , and our future Now . Faith's sister ! nurse of fair desire ! Fear's antidote ! a wise and well - stay'd fire ...
... fair fallacy by thee We are not WHERE nor What we be , But WHAT and WHERE we would be . Thus art thou Our absent PRESENCE , and our future Now . Faith's sister ! nurse of fair desire ! Fear's antidote ! a wise and well - stay'd fire ...
Page 492
... Fair , order'd lights ( whose motion without noise , 478 Fair , that you may truly know , 351 Faire Daffadills , we weep to see , 250 Faire pledges of a fruitfull Tree , 252 Faire Virtue , The Mistresse of Phil'arete . Sonnet 4 , 209 ...
... Fair , order'd lights ( whose motion without noise , 478 Fair , that you may truly know , 351 Faire Daffadills , we weep to see , 250 Faire pledges of a fruitfull Tree , 252 Faire Virtue , The Mistresse of Phil'arete . Sonnet 4 , 209 ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Angels Atheisme beauty beleeve body brest bright Christ Church creatures dayes dead death delight divine Donne doth drest E. M. W. Tillyard earth English Envy eyes F. R. Leavis face fair faith farre fear fire flames flowers friends give glasse glory Gondibert grace hast hath heart Heaven Henry Vaughan Herbert holy hope J. B. Leishman John Donne King learned light live look Lord ment metaphysical poets mind Muse Musick Nature ne're never night o're Philosophy Pisc pleasure poems poetry Poets Puritan reason selfe sense shee shew shine sight sing sleep Song soul spirit starr Stars Sunne sweet T. S. Eliot teares tell Text thee thine things thou art thou dost thought tion Trout truth UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN unto Vaughan verse vertue weep wind wings wise