God, Thou seest us Thy creatures bound Together by that law which holds the stars In palpitating cosmic passion bright; By which the very sun enthrals the earth, And all the waves of the world faint to the moon. Bulletin of the New York Public Library - Pagina 951door New York Public Library - 1915Volledige weergave - Over dit boek
| Eugen Kölbing, Johannes Hoops, Reinald Hoops - 1909 - 504 pagina’s
...ewigkeit der liebe spricht, kann von Phillips' stil eine Vorstellung geben. What can we fear, we two? O God, thou seest us Thy creatures bound Together by...very sun enthrals the earth, And all the waves of the worlds faint to the moon. Even i>y such attraction we two rush Together through the everlasting years.... | |
| Stephen Phillips - 1900 - 166 pagina’s
...FRANC. Nothing ! Ah, think not I can love you less — Only I fear. PAo. What can we fear, we two ? O God, Thou seest us Thy creatures bound Together by...holds the stars , In palpitating cosmic passion bright j \ By which the very sun enthrals the earth, And all the waves of the world faint to the moon. Even... | |
| 1900 - 354 pagina’s
...Paola to her. Swiftly to his'.revenge goes Giovanni, and Paola and Francesca pay the great price. ..^^ Together by that law which holds the stars In palpitating...And all the waves of the world faint to the moon." Phillips shows his master hand in the closing scene. There is no rant, no explosion. Giovanni, after... | |
| 1900 - 570 pagina’s
...degree. But I must leave the magnitude of his offence to be assessed by others : — O God, Thou tenet us Thy creatures bound Together by that law which...In palpitating cosmic passion bright : By which the rery S«n enthrals the Earth, And all the wares of the world faint to the Moon, Even by such attraction... | |
| Francis Fisher Browne - 1900 - 1026 pagina’s
...comes as near to speaking in his own voice as the subject will permit. " What can we fear, we two ? 0 God, Thou seest us Thy creatures bound Together by that law which holds the stars In palpitating coetn i с passion bright ; By which the very sun enthrals the earth. And all the waves of the world... | |
| William Henry Wilkins - 1901 - 598 pagina’s
...of it than these letters afford. CHAPTER XII THE DAWN OF PASSION (1691) What can we fear, we two? O God, Thou seest us Thy creatures bound Together by...palpitating cosmic passion bright; By which the very sun enthralls the earth, And all the waves of the world faint to the moon. Even by such attractions we... | |
| William Archer - 1902 - 664 pagina’s
...let these few lines from Paolo's last great speech suffice to prove : What can we fear, we two ? O God, Thou seest us Thy creatures bound Together by...we two rush Together through the everlasting years. * * # * * Still, still together, even when faints Thy sun, And past our souls Thy stars like ashes... | |
| Henry Houston Bonnell - 1902 - 486 pagina’s
...day that I have met with is Mr. Phillips' passage in ' Paola and Francesca ' : " O God, Thou seest Thy creatures bound Together by that law which holds...two rush Together through the everlasting years." entirely contained here ? My great miseries in this world have been Heathcliff's miseries, and I watched... | |
| Laurie Magnus - 1902 - 200 pagina’s
...this in a passage I have not yet quoted in his drama Paolo and Francesca, where Paolo exclaims,— " O God, Thou seest us Thy creatures bound Together by...And all the waves of the world faint to the moon." It is the triumph of poetical truth to have brought these scientific facts of gravitation into direct... | |
| John Haynes Holmes - 1913 - 72 pagina’s
...perfect whole. As Stephen Phillips has put it so beautifully, in his Paolo and Francesca, they are: "Creatures bound Together by that law which holds...And all the waves of the world faint to the moon.* i Now it is love of this kind — the spiritualization of the physical instinct of sex attraction —... | |
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