Many Moods: A Volume of Verse

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Smith, Elder & Company, 1878 - 254 страница
 

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Страница 209 - Yet Ah, that Spring should vanish with the Rose ! That Youth's sweet-scented manuscript should close! The Nightingale that in the branches sang, Ah whence, and whither flown again, who knows...
Страница 148 - Death, thou art a shadow ! Even as light Is but the shadow of invisible God, And of that shade the shadow is thin Night, Veiling the earth whereon our feet have trod ; So art Thou but the shadow of this life, Itself the pale and unsubstantial shade Of living God, fulfilled by love and strife Throughout the universe Himself hath made : And as frail Night, following the flight of earth, Obscures the world we breathe in, for a while, So Thou, the reflex of our mortal birth, Veilest the life wherein...
Страница 6 - About your feet the myrtles will be set, Grey rosemary, and thyme, and tender blue Of love-pale labyrinthine violet ; Flame-born anemones will glitter through Dark aisles of roofing pine-trees ; and for you The golden jonquil and starred asphodel And hyacinth their speechless tales will tell. The nightingales for you their tremulous song Shall pour amid the snowy scented bloom Of wild acacia bowers, and all night long Through starlight-flooded spheres of purple gloom Still lemon boughs shall spread...
Страница 195 - Give freely to the friend thou hast; Unto thyself thou givest: On barren soil thou canst not cast, For by his life thou livest. Nay, this alone doth trouble me — That I should still be giving Through him unto myself, when he Is love within me living. I fain would give to him alone, Nor let him guess the giver; Like dews that drop on hills unknown, To feed a lordly river.
Страница 19 - That day the master at his easel Wielded the liberal brush wherewith he painted At Orvieto, on the Duomo's walls, Stern forms of Death and Heaven and Hell and Judgment Then came they to him, cried : ' Thy son is dead, Slain in a duel : but the bloom of life Yet lingers round red lips and downy cheek.' Luca spoke not, but listened. Next they bore His dead son to the silent painting-room, And left on tiptoe son and sire alone. Still Luca spoke and groaned not ; but he raised The wonderful dead youth,...
Страница 19 - VASARI tells that Luca Signorelli, The morning star of Michael Angelo, Had but one son, a youth of seventeen summers, Who died. That day the master at his easel Wielded the liberal brush wherewith he painted At Orvieto, on the Duomo's walls, Stern forms of Death and Heaven and Hell and Judgment. Then came they to him, and cried: "Thy son is dead, Slain in a duel ; but the bloom of life Yet lingers round red lips and downy cheek.
Страница iii - The theft is to the thief, and comes back most to him, The love is to the lover, and comes back most to him, The gift is to the giver, and comes back most to him...
Страница 5 - Ravenna in her widowhood — the waste Where dreams a withered ocean ; where the hand Of time has gently played with tombs defaced Of priest and emperor ; where the temples stand, Proud. in decay, in desolation grand, — Solemn and sad like clouds that lingeringly Sail and are loth to fade upon the sky: Siena, Bride of Solitude, whose eyes Are lifted o'er the russet hills to scan Immeasurable tracts of limpid skies, Arching those silent sullen plains where man Fades like a weed mid mouldering marshes...
Страница 194 - Tis the greed To grasp, the hunger to assimilate All that earth holds of fair and delicate, The lust to blend with beauteous lives, to feed And take our fill of loveliness, which breed This anguish of the soul intern parate.

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Приказ није доступан - 1997

О аутору (1878)

John Addington Symonds was born in Bristol on 5 October 1840. Symonds attended first a private tutor's in Clifton, then to Harrow, then to Balliol and later to Magdalen. In 1860 he took a first in " Mods," and won the Newdigate with a poem on The Escorial; in 1862 he was placed in the first class in Literae Humaniores, and in the following year was winner of the Chancellor's English Essay. In 1862 he had been elected to an open fellowship at Magdalen. The strain of study unfortunately proved too great for him, and, immediately after his election to a fellowship, his health broke down, and he was obliged to seek rest in Switzerland. Symonds was plagued by ill health, and he would die of tuberculosis at the age of 52. During his last term at Oxford, in 1863 his health collapsed altogether, partly due to stress caused by the spread of rumours that he was having a homosexual affair with one of the students. His academic career was at an end, and for three years he was unable to do any work. He thought he might study law, but in 1865 it was discovered that his left lung was diseased, and after a complete rest it was decided that he could never follow a profession, but would have to go to a warmer, climate and become a writer. He spent the rest of his years between Switzerland and Venice, Italy. For many years Symonds's energy was wasted by trying to suppress his homosexuality. Essentially he wished to make homosexuality acceptable, both to himself and to society by idealizing it in his works. It is for his studies in the history of art that Symonds has been most highly praised and remembered, as well as his Rennaissance work. John Addington Symonds died at Rome on April 8, 1893.

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