Lives of the English Poets, Volume 1 |
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Page 42
Cowley says of the stone with which Cain slew his brother , I saw him fling the stone , as if he meant At once his murther and his monument . Of the sword taken from Goliah , he says , A sword so great , that it was only fit To take off ...
Cowley says of the stone with which Cain slew his brother , I saw him fling the stone , as if he meant At once his murther and his monument . Of the sword taken from Goliah , he says , A sword so great , that it was only fit To take off ...
Page 132
Of him , at last , may be said what Jonson says of Spenser , that he wrote no language , but has formed what Butler calls a Babylonish Dialect , in itself harsh and barbarous , but made by exalted genius and extensive learning ...
Of him , at last , may be said what Jonson says of Spenser , that he wrote no language , but has formed what Butler calls a Babylonish Dialect , in itself harsh and barbarous , but made by exalted genius and extensive learning ...
Page 137
In this part of his life , he married Mrs. Herbert , a gentlewoman of a good family ; and lived , says Wood , upon her fortune , having studied the common law , but never practised it . A fortune she had , says his biographer , but it ...
In this part of his life , he married Mrs. Herbert , a gentlewoman of a good family ; and lived , says Wood , upon her fortune , having studied the common law , but never practised it . A fortune she had , says his biographer , but it ...
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