The London Quarterly Review, 第 18 巻Theodore Foster, 1818 |
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... hope , he had at last re- joined her at Madrid , she died in the course of a few months . The death of this lady was celebrated in an eclogue remarkable as being the joint composition of Pedro de Medina Medinilla and Lopez himself ...
... hope , he had at last re- joined her at Madrid , she died in the course of a few months . The death of this lady was celebrated in an eclogue remarkable as being the joint composition of Pedro de Medina Medinilla and Lopez himself ...
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... hope , two may suffice . The first is from an Ode by Luis de Gongora . Raise thy renowned hand , O Spain , from French Pyrene , to the land Where the Moor Atlas lifts his mountain height , And at the martial trumpet's lofty sound Bid ...
... hope , two may suffice . The first is from an Ode by Luis de Gongora . Raise thy renowned hand , O Spain , from French Pyrene , to the land Where the Moor Atlas lifts his mountain height , And at the martial trumpet's lofty sound Bid ...
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... Hope's growing debt , and Patience might be crown'd , And the slow season of expectance past True Love with ample recompense at last Requite the sorrows of this hard delay . Alas for me , to whose unhappy doom No such blest end appears ...
... Hope's growing debt , and Patience might be crown'd , And the slow season of expectance past True Love with ample recompense at last Requite the sorrows of this hard delay . Alas for me , to whose unhappy doom No such blest end appears ...
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... hope . The creaking of the nora or water wheel by which the gardens of Spain are irrigated , and which in itself is not more agreeable than the creaking of any other wheel , is enumerated by the people among the delights of the country ...
... hope . The creaking of the nora or water wheel by which the gardens of Spain are irrigated , and which in itself is not more agreeable than the creaking of any other wheel , is enumerated by the people among the delights of the country ...
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... hope of winning her affections , but entreats her so earnestly to give him a black riband in exchange for a carved spoon , -that in an evil hour she consents ; Anfriso , seeing this and hearing nothing , would fain have put her to death ...
... hope of winning her affections , but entreats her so earnestly to give him a black riband in exchange for a carved spoon , -that in an evil hour she consents ; Anfriso , seeing this and hearing nothing , would fain have put her to death ...
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330 ページ - Sleep breathes at last from out thee, My little patient boy ; And balmy rest about thee Smooths off the day's annoy. I sit me down, and think Of all thy winning ways : Yet almost wish, with sudden shrink, That I had less to praise.
382 ページ - How can I describe my emotions at this catastrophe, or how delineate the wretch whom with such infinite pains and care I had endeavoured to form? His limbs were in proportion, and I had selected his features as beautiful.
458 ページ - ... that indestructible love of flowers and odours, and dews and clear waters, and soft airs and sounds, and bright skies, and woodland solitudes, and moonlight bowers, which are the Material elements of Poetry, and that fine sense of their undefinable relation to mental emotion, which is its essence and vivifying Soul, and which...
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