| 1891 - 556 psl.
...damn'd endure but to despair ; But knowing hoaven, to know it lost forever? Oongreve. IN THE HEART. Divines and dying men may talk of Hell But in my heart her several torments dwell. Shakespeare. HORRORS OF. A universe of death Where all life dies, death lives,... | |
| Alexander Whyte - 1894 - 248 psl.
...heaven, and let us in.' ' Myself am hell,' cried out Satan, in his agony of pride and rage and remorse. ' Divines and dying men may talk of hell, But in my heart her several torments dwell.' So you say of yourself, as you well may, after such a life as yours has been.... | |
| Royal Society of Literature (Great Britain) - 1895 - 944 psl.
...connection with this book is the fact that two well-known lines from the sonnet in the introduction — " Divines and dying men may talk of hell, But in my heart her several! torments dwell," are to be found inserted in a play called the ' Yorkshire Tragedy,' which... | |
| 1895 - 496 psl.
...The evil that men do lives nfter them The good is oflen buried with their bones. +) V, l, z. 38/39: »Divines and dying men may talk of hell, But in my heart the several torments dwell.« aus Nashe aao (Works ed. Grosart V, 10). § 4. Charaktere. Das eigentliche... | |
| Sir Adolphus William Ward - 1899 - 792 psl.
...thousand torches ushering the way.' A finely-expressed thought in an earlier scene of the same act — ' Divines and dying men may talk of hell, But in my heart the several torments dwell ' — recalls similar passages in Marlowe's Doctor Faustus (cf. vol. ip... | |
| Christopher Marlowe, Sir Adolphus William Ward - 1901 - 506 psl.
...10) by the author of A Yorkshire Tragedy (1608), a play in which Shakespeare possibly had a hand : 'Divines and dying men may talk of hell But in my heart her several torments dwell.' In Tancred and Gismunda (1568), iv. 2, occur the lines: •O hell (if other... | |
| Hialmer Day Gould, Edward Louis Hessenmueller - 1904 - 920 psl.
...heaven. — Milton If there be a paradise for virtues, there must be a hell for crimes. —Cotissin. Divines and dying men may talk of hell, But in my heart her several torments dwell. — Shakespeare. Hell is truth seen too late — duty neglected in its season.... | |
| John Addington Symonds - 1904 - 580 psl.
...at the very climax, of a couplet from Nash's ' Pierce Penniless' into the hero's desperate ravings : Divines and dying men may talk of hell, But in my heart its several torments dwell. 1 The peculiar power displayed in the short and stabbing daggerthrusts... | |
| Harold Bayley - 1906 - 418 psl.
...hereafter. " The enlightened and advanced views of Browne were shared in every detail by the dramatists. Divines and dying men may talk of Hell, But in my heart the several torments dwell. MARSTON (Insatiate Countess v.) 1613. Divines and dying men may talk of... | |
| Tryon Edwards - 1908 - 772 psl.
...when truth, resisted lone, is SMOIU our foe, and са11н eternity to do her right. — Уонж/. woman. — Luther. Nature's loving proxy, the watchful moth several torim nU dwell ¿jhatcfsptarc. If tin-re bo a paradise for virtues, there must be a hell for... | |
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