The Yale Literary Magazine, 82 tomas,2 leidimasHerrick & Noyes, 1916 |
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Allan Announced the election asked Edith awfully Beauty Belle Marquise binding breath Brick Row Print Bronxville Buffalo Calif California Building Chapel Street Charles charm Chi Delta Theta color Confessions Conn dance delightful Désirée Dobson door Doris dream Edward elves English Evanston eyes Fair Farrar feel Fred and Edith Frederick French G. P. Putnam's Sons gilt coming Hall Harold Hartford Hawkins heart Herrick Hula girls Jewels John Julia's kiss knew laughed light verse Linotype LITERARY MAGAZINE looking Mass Mead night Ohio P. M. IF LEFT PERCIVAL GRAY HART Perhaps Philip J. Q. Barry Plainfield Poet poetry Pseudo Snob rhyme rhyme scheme ROBERT PAUL PFLIEGER rose seemed smiled Society Verse soul stare Stephen Vincent Benét STREET NEW HAVEN thing Thomas thought Titania touch Tower of Jewels turned undergraduate vague far-away volume walk Walter Pater watch William words write Yale York City
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32 psl. - ... have come and gone, Many suns have set and shone, HERRICK, since thou sang'st of Wake, Morris-dance and Barley-break ; — Many men have ceased from care, Many maidens have been fair, Since thou sang'st of JULIA'S eyes, JULIA'S lawns and tiffanies ; — Many things are past : but thou, GOLDEN-MOUTH, art singing now, Singing clearly as of old, And thy numbers are of gold ! WITH A VOLUME OF VERSE.
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30 psl. - ... character of the third, the largest, the most famous, and by far the most brilliant division of his poems. It is obvious enough, yet it seems to have escaped or puzzled some, and few have kept it quite so steadily before them as might have been desirable. It is a combination eminently suited to produce a man skilled at catching, and contented to catch, the thoughts, the impressions, the joys, the sorrows of the present minute. Whatever matters, trivial or otherwise, Herrick is meditating he is...