To seek new worlds for gold, for praise, for glory, To try desire, to try love severed far, When I was gone, she sent her memory, More strong than were ten thousand ships of war ; To call me back, to leave great honour's thought, To leave my friends,... Sir Walter Ralegh: A Biography - Page 61by William Stebbing - 1891 - 413 lehteFull view - About this book
| Sir Walter Raleigh, Sir Henry Wotton - 1870 - 322 lehte
...severed far, When I was gone, she sent her memory, More strong than were ten thousand ships of war; To call me back, to leave great honour's thought,...sought, And hold both cares and comforts in contempt. Such heat in ice, such fire in frost remained, Such trust in doubt, such comfort in despair, Which,... | |
| sir Walter Ralegh - 1875 - 316 lehte
...severed far, When I was gone, she sent her memory, Morestrong than were ten thousand shipsof war ; To call me back, to leave great honour's thought,...sought, And hold both cares and comforts in contempt. Such heat in ice, such fire in frost remained, Such trust in doubt, such comfort in despair, Which,... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1889 - 584 lehte
...severed far, When I was gone, she sent her memory, More strong than were ten thousand ships of war, ' To call me back, to leave great honour's thought,...purpose I so long had sought, And hold both cares and comfort in contempt. ' Such heat in ice, such fire in frost remained, Such trust in doubt, such comfort... | |
| William Stebbing - 1891 - 446 lehte
...in the renewed radiance of happy prospects. So Cynthia, as far as it was ever composed, may be CH. VIII. considered one poem, to which the extant twenty-first...is afforded by the use in it of the name Belphoebe : nrw,,-f/-r. A queen she was to me — no more Belphoebe; A lion then - no more a milk-white dove;... | |
| Sir Walter Raleigh - 1892 - 326 lehte
...severed far, When I was gone, she sent her memory, More strong than were ten thousand ships of war; To call me back, to leave great honour's thought,...sought, And hold both cares and comforts in contempt. Such heat in ice, such fire in frost remained, Such trust in doubt, such comfort in despair, Which,... | |
| Edward George Harman - 1914 - 632 lehte
...severed far, When I was gone, she sent her memory, More strong than were ten thousand ships of war ; To call me back, to leave great honour's thought,...sought, And hold both cares and comforts in contempt. His changed fortunes : So my forsaken heart, my withered mind, — Widow of all the joys it once possessed,... | |
| Sir Walter Raleigh - 1916 - 146 lehte
...severed far, When I was gone, she sent her memory, More strong than were ten thousand ships of war ; To call me back, to leave great honour's thought,...sought, And hold both cares and comforts in contempt. Such heat in ice, such fire in frost remained, Such trust in doubt, such comfort in despair, Which,... | |
| North Carolina Literary and Historical Association - 1919 - 172 lehte
...severed far, When I was gone, she sent her memory, More strong than were ten thousand ships of war; To call me back, to leave great honour's thought,...attempt; To leave the purpose I so long had sought, And leave both cares and comforts in contempt. This sense of a destiny connected with the sea is apparent,... | |
| 1919 - 476 lehte
...her memory, More strong than were Ten Thousand Ships of war; To call me back, to leave great honor's thought To leave my friends, my fortune, my attempt;...sought, And hold both cares and comforts in contempt." Surely, there was nothing but financial loss and failure connected with the Virginia expeditions in... | |
| Edward George Harman - 1925 - 352 lehte
...More strong than were ten thousand ships of war ; To call me back, to leave great honour's wrought, To leave my friends, my fortune, my attempt ; To leave the purpose I so long had sought, To hold both cares and comforts in contempt. S«ch heat in ice, such fire in frost remained. Such trust... | |
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