Love still has something of the sea From whence his mother rose; No time his slaves from doubt can free, Nor give their thoughts repose. They are becalmed in clearest days, And in rough weather tost; They wither under cold delays, Or are in tempests lost. The Student: A Series of Papers - Pagina 98door Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton - 1836Volledige weergave - Over dit boek
| English poets - 1801 - 488 pagina’s
...fatal lion shun ; You found me harmless — leave me so ! For, were I not, you'd leave me too. SONG. LOVE still has something of the sea, From whence his mother rose : No time his slaves from doubt can free, Nor give their thoughts repose. They are becalm'd in clearest... | |
| George Ellis - 1803 - 474 pagina’s
...fatal lion shun ; You found me harmless — leave me so ! For, were I not, you'd leave me too. SONG. -. LOVE still has something of the sea, From whence his mother rose : No time his slaves from doubt can free, Nor give their thoughts repose. They are becalm'd in clearest... | |
| Rowland Freeman - 1821 - 846 pagina’s
...love you must have spy'd ; And thinking it a foolish part, To set to shew, what none can hide. SONG. Love still has something of the sea, From whence his mother rose; No time his slaves from doubt can free, Nor give their thoughts repose : They are becalm'd in clearest... | |
| Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton - 1832 - 228 pagina’s
...borrows a moral from Lycophron, and next he assures us, in one of the prettiest of his songs, that i Love still has something of the sea From whence his...while he neglected the practice, is less painfully classical and unseasonably mythological than might have been expected; and as from his tims the school... | |
| Samuel Carter Hall - 1836 - 390 pagina’s
...pieces have passages of great tenderness and undoubted wit, they are not generally successful. SEDLEY. LOVE still has something of the sea, From whence his mother rose ; No time his slaves from doubt can free, Nor give their thoughts repose : They are becalm'd in clearest... | |
| Samuel Carter Hall - 1836 - 336 pagina’s
...pieces have passages of great ten derness and undouhted wit, they are not generally suceessful. SEDLEY. LOVE still has something of the sea, From whence his mother rose ; No time his slaves from douht can free, Nor give their thoughts repose : They are hecalm'd in clearest... | |
| Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton - 1837 - 1058 pagina’s
...Betwixt Astraea and the Scorpion sign.' he borrows a moral from Lycophron, and next he assures uin one of the prettiest of his songs that — * Love...still has something of the sea From whence his mother rose.1 Dryden, whose excellence never lay in an accurate taste, though in his admirable prose writings... | |
| Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton - 1841 - 370 pagina’s
...Charles the Second escaped the hereditary taint. Sedley's mistresses are all Uranias and Phillis's. Now he borrows a moral from Lycophron, and next he...while he neglected the practice, is less painfully classic and unseasonably mythological than might have been expected ; and as from his time the school... | |
| Edward Vaughan Kenealy - 1845 - 362 pagina’s
...And then the wretched heart is lost. Smooth and pretty — but appropriated from SIR CHARLES SEDLEV. Love still has something of the sea From whence his mother rose ; No time his slaves from doubt can free Or give their hearts repose. tfje MOORE'S Anacreontic. Those... | |
| Edward Vaughan Kenealy - 1845 - 356 pagina’s
...And then the wretched heart is lost. Smooth and pretty — but appropriated from SIR CHARLES SEDLEY. Love still has something of the sea From whence his mother rose ; No time his slaves from doubt can free Or give their hearts repose. |3l«i<j!,inSm tl)r MOORE'S Anacreontic.... | |
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