Introduction to PoetrySloane, 1951 - 556 páginas Donated by Sydney Harris. |
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Página 70
... once more smell the dew and rain , And relish versing . O my only Light , It cannot be That I am he On whom Thy tempests fell all night . These are Thy wonders , Lord of love , To make us see we are but flowers that glide ; Which when we ...
... once more smell the dew and rain , And relish versing . O my only Light , It cannot be That I am he On whom Thy tempests fell all night . These are Thy wonders , Lord of love , To make us see we are but flowers that glide ; Which when we ...
Página 105
... once were moved by a strange junction of waning moon and sloping hill to consider whether we had not some presentiments after all of what sur- vival means . The dead may keep something and live on . The soul has its properties which can ...
... once were moved by a strange junction of waning moon and sloping hill to consider whether we had not some presentiments after all of what sur- vival means . The dead may keep something and live on . The soul has its properties which can ...
Página 113
... once would be as fearsome a thing as Dante found it in his Paradiso , where stage by stage he was disciplined to endure it and its accompanying light . The parallel is not perfectly drawn , any more than Donne's parable of the sun , or ...
... once would be as fearsome a thing as Dante found it in his Paradiso , where stage by stage he was disciplined to endure it and its accompanying light . The parallel is not perfectly drawn , any more than Donne's parable of the sun , or ...
Contenido
A single asterisk before the title of a poem indicates that it is analyzed | xxxiv |
The Roman Road Thomas Hardy 107 | xxxiv |
SIR EDWARD DYER 1545?1607 | xxxiv |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
accent alliteration ANDREW MARVELL ballad beast beauty bright Chloe comes couplet cuccu dance dead dear death doth Emily Dickinson eyes fair fall Farewell feeling flowers garden gentle GEORGE PEELE green hair hast hath hear heard heart heaven Hodge keep lady leaves light live look Lord Judge Lord Randal love's lover lyre Margret Mary Morison matter mind Minnaloushe mistress moon mother moves never night once Oven Bird pleasure poem poet poetry praise quatrain rhyme rhythm ROBERT FROST Roman Road Second Coming seems seen sense shade shadows sing Sir Patrick Spens sleep song sonnet soul sound spring stars sweet sweet Lord syllable tell thee thine thing THOMAS HARDY thou thought Tottell tree trimeter true verse voice WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS wind wonder words Wordsworth Wyatt Yeats ΙΟ