Cressid's name the very crown of falsehood, If ever she leave Troilus ! Time, force, and death, Do to this body what extremes you can ; But the strong base and building of my love Is as the very centre of the earth, Drawing all things to it. The Living Age - 205 psl.1897Visos knygos peržiūra - Apie šią knygą
| Nathaniel Holmes - 1867 - 636 psl.
...well enough for poetic metaphor : — "Crett. Time, force, and death, Do to this body what extremes you can, But the strong base and building of my love...very centre of the Earth, Drawing all things to it." — Tro. and Crett., Act IV. Sc. 2. But while denying that mere empty place, or an imaginary mathematical... | |
| Thomas Howell - 1867 - 72 psl.
...Cressida says^but I fear without meaning it— " Time, force, and death, Do to this body what extremes you can ; But the strong base and building of my love...very centre of the earth, Drawing all things to it." The circulation of the blood, discovered by Harvey and published to the world in AD 1619, is almost... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1870 - 674 psl.
...Troilus. — O you gods divine! Make Cressid's name the very crown of falsehood If ever she leave Troilus! Time, force, and death, Do to this body what extremity...very centre of the earth, Drawing all things to it. — I will go in and weep ; — PAN. Do, dO. ORES. Tear my bright hair, and scratch my praised cheeks;... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1871 - 620 psl.
...crown8 of falsehood, If ever she leave Troilus ! Time, force, and death, Do to this body what extremes you can ; But the strong base and building of my love...very centre of the earth, Drawing all things to it. — I'll go in, and weep ;Pan. Do, do. Cres. Tear my bright hair, and scratch my praised cheeks, Crack... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1874 - 626 psl.
...force, and death, Do to this body what extremes* you can ; But the strong base and building of my lore Is as the very centre of the earth, Drawing all things to it. — I will go in and weep ; — PAN. Do, do. ORES. Tear my bright hair, and scratch my praised cheeks... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1874 - 310 psl.
...Cressida, Act iii. Sc. 2. CONSTANCY [642]. .... Time, force, and death, Do to this body what extremes you can ; But the strong base and building of my love...very centre of the earth, Drawing all things to it. Cressida. Troilus and Cressida, Act iv. Sc. 2. CONSTANCY [40]. . . . . O heaven ! were man But constant,... | |
| 1874 - 802 psl.
...overmastering relation that Cressida's love stood to all her other feelings, when she declares — " My love Is as the very centre of the earth Drawing all things to it." Faith is the tonic of the poetical scale, the key-note to which the most wildly discursive imagination... | |
| 1874 - 804 psl.
...overmastering relation that Creseida's love stood to all her other feelings, when she declares — " My love Is as the very centre of the earth Drawing all things to it." Faith is the tonic of the poetical scale, the key-note to which the most wildly discursive imagination... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell, Henry T. Steele - 1874 - 810 psl.
...overmastering relation that Cressida's love stood to all her other feelings, when she declares — ' ' My love Is as the very centre of the earth Drawing all things to it." Faith is the tonic of the poetical scale, the key-note to which the most widely discursive imagination... | |
| Charles Carroll Bombaugh - 1875 - 868 psl.
...observations of a physical law than those of Pascal or Newton. Shakspeare says in Troilus and Cressida: — But the strong base and building of my love Is as...very centre of the earth Drawing all things to it. — iv. 2. and True as earth to its centre. — iii. 2. Three centuries before Shakspeare, Dante said... | |
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