Maud and Other PoemsMethuen, 1899 - 124 |
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Wyniki 1 - 5 z 6
Strona 27
... tell Whether war be a cause or a consequence ? 3 Put down the passions that make earth Hell ! 1 A wounded thing . ] This and next line are not in 1st edition . 2 Broad - brim'd hawker . ] Tennyson vehemently repudiated the notion that ...
... tell Whether war be a cause or a consequence ? 3 Put down the passions that make earth Hell ! 1 A wounded thing . ] This and next line are not in 1st edition . 2 Broad - brim'd hawker . ] Tennyson vehemently repudiated the notion that ...
Strona 38
... tell her before we part , I must tell her , or die . 1 Thrall slave . ] Cp . thraldom , enthrall . XVII1 Go not , happy day , From the shining 38 MAUD.
... tell her before we part , I must tell her , or die . 1 Thrall slave . ] Cp . thraldom , enthrall . XVII1 Go not , happy day , From the shining 38 MAUD.
Strona 44
... tell , Blest , but for some dark undercurrent woe That seems to draw - but it shall not be so : Let all be well , be well . 1 False death . ] Cp . Shakespeare ( Sonnets ) : " Death's second self , that seals up all in rest . ' Tennyson ...
... tell , Blest , but for some dark undercurrent woe That seems to draw - but it shall not be so : Let all be well , be well . 1 False death . ] Cp . Shakespeare ( Sonnets ) : " Death's second self , that seals up all in rest . ' Tennyson ...
Strona 65
... tell us What and where they be . 10 that , etc. ] This stanza , as we have already seen , formed the nucleus of the poem . 2 By the home . ] 1st edition read " Of the land . 4 It leads me forth at evening , It lightly 5 MAUD 65.
... tell us What and where they be . 10 that , etc. ] This stanza , as we have already seen , formed the nucleus of the poem . 2 By the home . ] 1st edition read " Of the land . 4 It leads me forth at evening , It lightly 5 MAUD 65.
Strona 72
... our babes , poor souls ! It is all used up for that . 7 Tell him now she is standing here at my head ; Not beautiful now , not even kind ; 1 Sure . ] 1st edition read " sir . " He may take her now ; for she never speaks 72 MAUD.
... our babes , poor souls ! It is all used up for that . 7 Tell him now she is standing here at my head ; Not beautiful now , not even kind ; 1 Sure . ] 1st edition read " sir . " He may take her now ; for she never speaks 72 MAUD.
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Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
1st edition reads ALFRED LORD TENNYSON Arabian night army babble battle beat beautiful blood bow'd bright brook brother Brunelleschi bury Cannon cold crown dark dead dear Death delight dream DUKE OF WELLINGTON eagle earth echo ELIZABETH WORDSWORTH evil eyes F. D. MAURICE father feet flash'd flow To join French garden gloom glory gone grave half Hall hand happy head hear heart hero honour horses Idylls Isle of Wight join the brimming Katie Lamech land Light Brigade lilies Lincolnshire lines Lombard look'd lord Maud Maud's lover meadow mind night noble o'er passionate peace Pentagram people's voice poem poison'd poor rings Romeo and Juliet rose Rosy seem'd shell Shining daffodil sighs silent smile stanzas stood sweet Tennyson's thee Their's thine things thou thought thro told true vext Waterloo weep Wellington wood ΙΟ