Essays on Renaissance Poetry |
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Page 249
... king ought to hope for greater . Do not yourself despise a fortune that others deem splendid . Yet you are straining to renew it , pitting it against the fortune of a king whose lively " virtue " ever rises higher and higher . You must ...
... king ought to hope for greater . Do not yourself despise a fortune that others deem splendid . Yet you are straining to renew it , pitting it against the fortune of a king whose lively " virtue " ever rises higher and higher . You must ...
Page 250
... King , come just to this : that whatever either of you has gained from the other in war is less to the advantage of the victor than to the detriment of the Republic . And now in turning to you , Most Christian King , I see a greater ...
... King , come just to this : that whatever either of you has gained from the other in war is less to the advantage of the victor than to the detriment of the Republic . And now in turning to you , Most Christian King , I see a greater ...
Page 262
... king over a king of his own kind ? what other glory before Christ has the triumph of the one over the other except that the victor has defeated his brother king , despoiled his brother king , led his brother king in triumph ? " 38 And ...
... king over a king of his own kind ? what other glory before Christ has the triumph of the one over the other except that the victor has defeated his brother king , despoiled his brother king , led his brother king in triumph ? " 38 And ...
Contents
Preface | 11 |
Some English Poems in Praise of Music | 17 |
The First Idyl of Moschus in Imitations to the | 74 |
Copyright | |
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Amor ancient angels anonymous Anthology appears arts beginning Bellum better bring century Christian classical Cupid divine doubt edition effects elements English epigram Erasmus example expression fact final France French given gives Greek hand harmony heaven Henri human hymn idea imitation included influence interest Italy king later Latin lines literary literature London Love means mentioned mind Moschus nature notice once oration original Paix Paris passage peace perhaps phrase poem poetry poets praise present princes printed probably published Querela quoted reference Renaissance rhetorical Ronsard seems Shakespeare singing song sonnet soul Spenser spheres spirit suggest theme thought tion topic tout tradition translation turn University Venus verses whole writers written