| Marc Berley - 2000 - 440 páginas
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| William Butler Yeats - 1989 - 440 páginas
...of Christ attested before a magistrate. We sought religious conviction by a more difficult research: How charming is divine philosophy! Not harsh and crabbed,...as dull fools suppose, But musical as is Apollo's lute.402 Now that Ireland was substituting traditions of government for the rhetoric of agitation our... | |
| Mike Sanders - 2001 - 632 páginas
...of Woman from The New Moral World, 22 June 1839, p. 549. TO THE EDITOR OF THE NEW MORAL WORLD. Sir, "How charming is divine philosophy. Not harsh and...perpetual feast of nectar'd sweets, Where no crude surfeits reigns." Such were the outpourings of a mind that revelled in the delight of mental and moral... | |
| John Henry Newman - 2001 - 492 páginas
...it may for a while carry it away captive. Such is that " divine Philosophy," in the poet's words, " Not harsh and crabbed, as dull fools suppose, But...musical, as is Apollo's lute, And a perpetual feast of nectared sweets, Where no crude surfeit reigns." The Athenians then exercised Influence by discarding... | |
| John Keats - 2001 - 667 páginas
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| Henry O'Brien - 2002 - 556 páginas
...language of the first human cultivators — the nursery of letters, and the cradle of revelation. " How charming is divine Philosophy ! Not harsh and...musical as is Apollo's lute, And a perpetual feast of nectared sweets Where no crude surfeit reigns." 252 CHAPTER XIX. THE Tuath-de-danaans, or Mahabadeans,... | |
| John Keats - 2002 - 584 páginas
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