Seventeenth-century Verse and Prose, Volume 1Macmillan, 1951 - 498 pages Volume One: Poets included are Lancelot Andrewes, Francis Bacon, John Donne, Ben Jonson, Robert Burton, Phineas Fletcher, Giles Fletcher, George Wither, Thomas Hobbes, Robert Herrick, George Herbert, Izaak Walton, Thomas Carew, Sir Thomas Browne, Sir William Davenant, Edmund Waller, Sir John Suckling, Abraham Cowley, Andrew Marvell, and Henry Vaughan. |
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Page 3
... sense made it impossible for Queen Elizabeth to implement the claims to supreme power in Church and State which her father had bequeathed to her . She was more sensitive to opinions other than her own , and not disposed to jeop- ardize ...
... sense made it impossible for Queen Elizabeth to implement the claims to supreme power in Church and State which her father had bequeathed to her . She was more sensitive to opinions other than her own , and not disposed to jeop- ardize ...
Page 218
... sense , as to another . IMAGINATION therefore is nothing but decaying sense ; and is found 10 in men , and many other living Creatures , aswell sleeping , as waking . The decay of Sense in men waking , is not the decay of the motion made in ...
... sense , as to another . IMAGINATION therefore is nothing but decaying sense ; and is found 10 in men , and many other living Creatures , aswell sleeping , as waking . The decay of Sense in men waking , is not the decay of the motion made in ...
Page 219
... sense , imagination , and memory - there results what may be called understanding . This kind of understanding is common to man and beast . It yields what Hobbes calls foresight or prudence - in other words , natural wisdom . In the ...
... sense , imagination , and memory - there results what may be called understanding . This kind of understanding is common to man and beast . It yields what Hobbes calls foresight or prudence - in other words , natural wisdom . In the ...
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Common terms and phrases
appear beauty better body bright bring cause Church common dead death desire divine doth earth English eyes face fair faith fall fear fire fish give glory grace grow hand hast hath head heart Heaven Herbert hope Italy keep kind King knowledge learned leave less light live look Lord Master mean mind move nature never night once passe persons pleasure poems poetry Poets poor present reason rest rise seems selfe sense sing sleep Song soul speak spirit spring stand sure sweet teares tell Text thee thine things thou thought tion true truth turn unto verse vertue whole wind wings wise