| Robert Browning - 1994 - 718 páginas
...slave nor free! Where does the fault lie? What the core O' the wound, since wound must be? DC I would 1 could adopt your will, See with your eyes, and set my heart noting by yours, and drink my fill At your soul's springs, — your pan my part In life, for good and... | |
| Matthew Reynolds - 2005 - 322 páginas
...to; we are on the verge of configuring his words as universal lyric truth, but are pushed back: IX. I would I could adopt your will, See with your eyes,...and set my heart Beating by yours, and drink my fill 71 'Evelyn Hope', i; 'A Lovers' Quarrel', 74; 'The Statue and the Bust', 170. 72 Chesterton, Robert... | |
| Matthew Reynolds - 2001 - 322 páginas
...to; we are on the verge of configuring his words as universal lyric truth, but are pushed back: DC. I would I could adopt your will, See with your eyes, and set my heart by yours, and deink my fill 7i 'Evelyn Hope', i; 'A Lovers' Quarrel', 74; 'The Sratue and the Bust',... | |
| Edwin Markham - 1927 - 362 páginas
...mine, nor slave nor free! Where does the fault lie? What the core O' the wound, since wound must be? I would I could adopt your will, See with your eyes,...heart Beating by yours, and drink my fill At your soul's springs — your part my part In life, for good and ill. No, I yearn upward, touch you close,... | |
| 1917 - 498 páginas
...happily illustrative of this psychological identification characteristic of the sentiment of love: " I would I could adopt your will, See with your eyes,...heart Beating by yours, and drink my fill At your soul's springs, — your part my part In life, for good and ill." 15 We say also enamored of. The German... | |
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