FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   >>  
d: 'And (thou in this flame sacrific'd to me), We might each other's mutual martyr be.' The whole third stanza is reproduced from 1647; it figures neither in 1651 nor in 1657. 39:2. P. 47, line 30. 'Love': 1647; a manifest befogging duplication of the 'love' in the preceding line. 'Kill' seems to be called for, or perhaps 'slay,' a word less in favour with Stanley. 40:1. _To Celia, pleading want of merit_ (p. 48). 1647: 'To One that pleaded her own Want of Merit.' 40:2. P. 48, line 12. 'My': 1647. 40:3. P. " line 19. The name in 1651, 1657; but 'Dearest' in 1647. 41:1. _The Kiss_. (p. 49). 1647: 'The Killing Kiss.' 41:2. P. 49, line 4. 'Forms' may be a misprint of 1651, 1657. This line in 1647 reads: 'They both unite and join.' 41:3. P. 49, line 6. 'And': 1651; 'by' (which carries out the context) in the others. 41:4. P. 49, line 12. 1647: 'Our lips, our tongues, each other's thoughts betray.' 41:5. P. 49, line 17. 1647: 'Doris.' _The Snowball_ (p. 50). 42:1. P. 50, line 10. 'Whiter' in all; but 'winter' must be the word. 43:1. _The Deposition_ (p. 50). 1647: 'A Deposition from Beauty.' 43:2. P. 51, line 1. 'Were': 1651. 43:3. P. " line 3. 'Do': 1647; somewhat clearer than 'all,' in the texts of 1651, 1657. 43:4. P. 51, line 9. 'Glories': 1651. 43:5. P. " line 16. 'Which': 1647. _Love's Heretic_ (p. 52). 44:1. P. 53, line 34. 'That': 1647. 44:2. P. " line 38. 'Pleasures': 1651, 1657. _La Belle Confidante_ (p. 54). 45:1. P. 55, line 16. 'Can nor decay nor die': 1651. 45:2. P. 55, line 17. 'And': 1647. 45:3. P. " lines 18, 20. 1647: 'Even in divorce delighted, . . . . . Still in the grave united.' _The Divorce_ (p. 57). 46:1. P. 57, line 4. 1657: 'cannot.' 46:2. P. " line 12. 1647: 'That taught me such idolatry.' The line as printed in this book follows 1657. 46:3. P. 57, line 14. 'Cold': 1647. 46:4. P. " lines 15-16. 1647: 'I by thy hate might be releas'd, Who now am prisoner to thy love.' 46:5. P. 58. lines 21-22. 1647: 'Thus whilst so many suppliants do Implore thy pity they may prove.' _The Bracelet_ (p. 58). 47:1. P. 58, line 12. 1651 and 1657 have the line revised to its detriment: 'A heart that many storms
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   >>  



Top keywords:

Deposition

 

clearer

 

divorce

 

Glories

 

Heretic

 
Confidante
 

Pleasures

 

suppliants

 

Implore


whilst
 

prisoner

 
detriment
 

storms

 

revised

 

Bracelet

 

taught

 

idolatry

 

Divorce


united

 

printed

 

releas

 

delighted

 

called

 

preceding

 

favour

 

pleaded

 

pleading


Stanley

 

duplication

 

befogging

 

martyr

 
mutual
 

sacrific

 

stanza

 

manifest

 
figures

reproduced

 

tongues

 

thoughts

 

betray

 

context

 

Snowball

 

Beauty

 

winter

 

Whiter


carries

 
Dearest
 

Killing

 

misprint