Sir Philip SidneyHarper & brothers, 1899 - 186 Seiten |
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Seite 1
... less degree perhaps , true also of Sidney . His best friend and interpreter put on record that " the youth , life , and fortune of this gentle- man were , indeed , but sparks of extraordinary greatness in him , which , for want of clear ...
... less degree perhaps , true also of Sidney . His best friend and interpreter put on record that " the youth , life , and fortune of this gentle- man were , indeed , but sparks of extraordinary greatness in him , which , for want of clear ...
Seite 12
... less eagerness to train his body in such exercises as might be serviceable to a gentleman , and use- ful to a soldier . Nevertheless , his friend's admiring eulogy of the lad's deportment indicates what , to the end , remained somewhat ...
... less eagerness to train his body in such exercises as might be serviceable to a gentleman , and use- ful to a soldier . Nevertheless , his friend's admiring eulogy of the lad's deportment indicates what , to the end , remained somewhat ...
Seite 14
... Sidney added a postscript , which , if it is less correct in style and weighty with wise counsel , interests us by its warm and motherly affection . " Your noble and careful father hath taken pains ( 14 [ CHAP . SIR PHILIP SIDNEY .
... Sidney added a postscript , which , if it is less correct in style and weighty with wise counsel , interests us by its warm and motherly affection . " Your noble and careful father hath taken pains ( 14 [ CHAP . SIR PHILIP SIDNEY .
Seite 16
... less upon the banks of the Isis than at Cambridge and in our public schools . Bruno , in his account of a visit to Oxford ten years later , introduces us to a set of pompous pedants , steeped in mediæval scholasticism and heavy with the ...
... less upon the banks of the Isis than at Cambridge and in our public schools . Bruno , in his account of a visit to Oxford ten years later , introduces us to a set of pompous pedants , steeped in mediæval scholasticism and heavy with the ...
Seite 18
... Leices ter had to obtain permission for him to eat flesh in Lent from no less a personage than Doctor Parker , the Arch- bishop of Canterbury . CHAPTER II . FOREIGN TRAVEL . It is not the 18 [ CHAP . I. SIR PHILIP SIDNEY .
... Leices ter had to obtain permission for him to eat flesh in Lent from no less a personage than Doctor Parker , the Arch- bishop of Canterbury . CHAPTER II . FOREIGN TRAVEL . It is not the 18 [ CHAP . I. SIR PHILIP SIDNEY .
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Arcadia Astrophel and Stella beauty bliss brother called Cloth Court dear death defence delight desire doth Dudley Duke Duke of Anjou Earl edition Elizabeth England English Essex excellent eyes famous father favour fear flower France French match Fulke Greville gentleman Gilt Tops grace hath heart honour hope Ireland Italian J. A. SYMONDS John Jonson king Lady Mary Languet learning LESLIE STEPHEN letter light live Lord Deputy Lord Rich lyric Majesty marriage Mary Sidney matter mind Molineux Muse Musidorus night noble passion Penelope Penelope Devereux Penshurst poems Poesy poet poetical poetry present prince Pyrocles queen R. W. CHURCH seems sent Sidney's Sir Henry Sidney Sir Philip Sidney sonnets soul Spain Spenser spirit style sweet thee and thee things thou thought tion true unto verse virtue Walsingham words write written wrote young youth Zutphen