Proverbs in Porcelain, and Other VersesC. Kegan Paul, 1878 - 216 psl. A manuscript revision of: Proverbs in porcelain and other verses / by Austin Dobson. London : H.S. King & Co., 1877. A printed copy of the 1st ed., with holograph corrections made in preparation of the 2nd ed. Punctuation, formatting, words, lines and poems are corrected or crossed out, pages are reordered, and holograph and printed pages are tipped in before or pasted over existing text. |
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19 psl.
... Graceful ? You think it ? What , with hands That hang like this ( with a gesture ) . ARMANDE . And how she stands ! M. LOYAL . Nay , I am wrong again . I thought Her air delightfully untaught ! HORTENSE . But you amuse me— M. LOYAL ...
... Graceful ? You think it ? What , with hands That hang like this ( with a gesture ) . ARMANDE . And how she stands ! M. LOYAL . Nay , I am wrong again . I thought Her air delightfully untaught ! HORTENSE . But you amuse me— M. LOYAL ...
207 psl.
... graceful of Trans - Atlantic poets , with a more accurate version of the facts . Those who wish to read the " true story " of poor little James Speaight must do so in the pathetic setting of THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH . NOTE 7 , PAGE 65 ...
... graceful of Trans - Atlantic poets , with a more accurate version of the facts . Those who wish to read the " true story " of poor little James Speaight must do so in the pathetic setting of THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH . NOTE 7 , PAGE 65 ...
208 psl.
... gracefully rhymed a lyric of Catullus - ' en Rondeau . ' NOTE 9 , PAGE 81 . On London Stones . Here is a Rondeau of Voiture's , on Rondeau - making : ' Ma foy ; c'est fait de moy . Car Isabeau M'a conjuré de luy faire un Rondeau . Cela ...
... gracefully rhymed a lyric of Catullus - ' en Rondeau . ' NOTE 9 , PAGE 81 . On London Stones . Here is a Rondeau of Voiture's , on Rondeau - making : ' Ma foy ; c'est fait de moy . Car Isabeau M'a conjuré de luy faire un Rondeau . Cela ...
214 psl.
... graceful . We would gladly linger over such a de- lightful volume . " SATURDAY REVIEW . " Even if his ' Vignettes in Rhyme ' had come by itself we should have given it a kindly welcome . But we picked it up out of a pile of the most ...
... graceful . We would gladly linger over such a de- lightful volume . " SATURDAY REVIEW . " Even if his ' Vignettes in Rhyme ' had come by itself we should have given it a kindly welcome . But we picked it up out of a pile of the most ...
216 psl.
... graceful poet , -titles that used to be associated in the thought of courtly and debonair wits . Such a poet , to hold the hearts he has won , not only must maintain his quality , but strive to vary his style ; because , while there is ...
... graceful poet , -titles that used to be associated in the thought of courtly and debonair wits . Such a poet , to hold the hearts he has won , not only must maintain his quality , but strive to vary his style ; because , while there is ...
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Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
ABBÉ Austin Dobson Autonoë BALLAD BARON BEAU BROCADE birds blow Bluebottle brow Caliph CHALCEDONY Child COUNTESS Cupid's Alley Cyclops dance Davus dear DENISE DOLLY the Chambermaid door Dora dream e'en eau de Cologne Etesian eyes fancies Farewell Fate Finis comes Gallions of Spayne GEORGE the Guard give us-but Yesterday goat graceful green HORTENSE L'ÉTOILE laughing rhyme little Bowes London stones look Love Love's LOYAL M'sieu Maid Monsieur morning Muse night NINETTE NINON NOTE o'er once Ovid pains of prose pale PANTOUM pipe and flute poem poetic Poets poor Miss Tox Porto Bello PRINCESS ripple of laughing Rondeau Rondel saw you last Shepherdess Dorine adored smile soft song Stand and Deliver stirred strange surely sweet swine tear There's thou thought Triolets turned twas vers de société verse VIEUXBOIS Vignettes in Rhyme Villanelle voice waken woes youth
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87 psl. - WITH pipe and flute the rustic Pan Of old made music sweet for man ; And wonder hushed the warbling bird, And closer drew the calm-eyed herd, — The rolling river slowlier ran. Ah I would, — ah ! would, a little span, Some air of Arcady could fan This age of ours, too seldom stirred With pipe and flute...
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72 psl. - ... awhile to the prayer of us, — Beggars that come from the over-seas! Nothing we ask or of gold or fees; Harry us not with the hounds we pray; Lo, — for the surcote's hem we seize, — Give us — ah! give us — but Yesterday!
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