Selected WorksRinehart, 1953 - 424 pages |
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Page 155
... sight ! I would not kill the man whom I have loved , And cannot hurt the woman ; but avoid me : I do not know how ... sight for ever ! CLEOPATRA . How ? for ever ! I cannot go one moment from your sight , 530 540 And must I go for ever ...
... sight ! I would not kill the man whom I have loved , And cannot hurt the woman ; but avoid me : I do not know how ... sight for ever ! CLEOPATRA . How ? for ever ! I cannot go one moment from your sight , 530 540 And must I go for ever ...
Page 246
... sight , and touch , and taste rebel ? Superior faculties are set aside ; Shall their subservient organs be my guide ? Then let the moon usurp the rule of day , And winking tapers shew the sun his way ; For what my senses can themselves ...
... sight , and touch , and taste rebel ? Superior faculties are set aside ; Shall their subservient organs be my guide ? Then let the moon usurp the rule of day , And winking tapers shew the sun his way ; For what my senses can themselves ...
Page 383
... sight . I acknowledge the hand of art appears in repartee , as of necessity it must in all kind of verse . But there is also the quick and poignant brevity of it ( which is an high imitation of nature in those sudden gusts of pas- sion ) ...
... sight . I acknowledge the hand of art appears in repartee , as of necessity it must in all kind of verse . But there is also the quick and poignant brevity of it ( which is an high imitation of nature in those sudden gusts of pas- sion ) ...
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Common terms and phrases
Absalom and Achitophel Aeneid ALEXAS ancient Anne Killigrew ANTONY Aristotle audience bear beauty Ben Jonson betwixt blank verse Boccace Caesar Canterbury Tales CHARMION Chaucer Church CLEOPATRA comedy Crites dare death DOLABELLA Dryden English EPILOGUE Eugenius ev'n ev'ry eyes fame fate father fear Fletcher foes French give grace haste Heaven honour Horace humour IRAS Jebusites John Dryden Jonson judge kind king leave Lisideius live look lord lost lovers Mac Flecknoe mistress Muse nature never numbers o'er OCTAVIA Ovid pains passion peace persons plain play plot poem poesy poet poetry pow'r praise priests PROLOGUE queen reason rhyme Roman Rome ruin satire scene SERAPION Shakespeare sigh sight Silent Woman soul speak stage sweet thee things thou thought thro tion tragedies translated truth VENTIDIUS Virgil words writ write youth