The Works of George Chapman ...Chatto and Windus, 1875 |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 81
Página xii
... fear to frequent their walks . The profane multitude I hate , and only consecrate my strange poems to those searching spirits whom learning hath made noble , and nobility sacred . " And this is throughout his manner of reference to the ...
... fear to frequent their walks . The profane multitude I hate , and only consecrate my strange poems to those searching spirits whom learning hath made noble , and nobility sacred . " And this is throughout his manner of reference to the ...
Página xxv
... fear of piratical publishers who might print ' by stealth ' an unauthorized and interpolated edition , without my passport , patched with other's wit , ' he consents to expose to every common eye ' what he calls " " The least allowed ...
... fear of piratical publishers who might print ' by stealth ' an unauthorized and interpolated edition , without my passport , patched with other's wit , ' he consents to expose to every common eye ' what he calls " " The least allowed ...
Página xxvii
... fear if not for shame the dastardly and lying shelter of a pseudonym which might at a pinch have been abjured , and the responsibility for its use shifted from his own shoulders to those of a well - meaning but invisible friend , the ...
... fear if not for shame the dastardly and lying shelter of a pseudonym which might at a pinch have been abjured , and the responsibility for its use shifted from his own shoulders to those of a well - meaning but invisible friend , the ...
Página xlviii
... fear or mistrust of the gods , and the soliloquy in the last act on sleep and death . The serene and sublime emotion of heroic wisdom is in either passage so touched and tempered with something of the personal ardour of a noble passion ...
... fear or mistrust of the gods , and the soliloquy in the last act on sleep and death . The serene and sublime emotion of heroic wisdom is in either passage so touched and tempered with something of the personal ardour of a noble passion ...
Página li
... Fear , Deceit , Despair ; Slander and Clamour , that rent all the air ; Hate , War , and Massacre ; uncrowned Toil And Sickness , t ' all the rest the base and foil , Crept after ; and his deadly weight trod down Wealth , Beauty , and ...
... Fear , Deceit , Despair ; Slander and Clamour , that rent all the air ; Hate , War , and Massacre ; uncrowned Toil And Sickness , t ' all the rest the base and foil , Crept after ; and his deadly weight trod down Wealth , Beauty , and ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
The Works of George Chapman: Poems and Minor Translations, Volume 2 George Chapman Visualização integral - 1875 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
A. B. GROSART Andromeda bear beauty blest blood breast Bussy d'Ambois cast Chapman cloth extra cloth limp Crown 8vo dear death Deities divine doth earth Edited eternal Exit eyes fair fame Fcap fear fire flames George Chapman give Gods grace hand hast hath hear heart heaven Hero and Leander Hesiod Homer honour Iliad illustrated boards immortal Jove Jove's king labour Lady Leander learning light live lord love's lute master men's mind mistress Muse never night noble nought Ovid oxen peace Perseus Phoebus play poem poet poor Post 8vo praise Prince Proberio rich sacred Second Maiden's Tragedy shine sight Simplo sing soul spirit sweet thee thine things thou thought true truth verse vex'd virtue Vols Votarius Wife words worth
Passagens conhecidas
Página 57 - It lies not in our power to love or hate, For will in us is overruled by Fate. When two are stripped, long ere the course begin We wish that one should lose, the other win; And one especially do we affect Of two gold ingots, like in each respect. The reason no man knows; let it suffice. What we behold is censured by our eyes.