| Gerald Monsman - 1984 - 182 стор.
...house — I was told of such — what were they to me, being out of the boundaries of my Eden? — So far from a wish to roam, I would have drawn, methought,...securer cincture of those excluding garden walls. (2:i55) For the child there will be no tempting a watery fate as in "Ears" or in "Witches," no plunge... | |
| R. Wilcher - 1985 - 214 стор.
...forever from the dangers of sexual and military warfare beyond the protective screen of the trees: 'And, oh, so close your circles lace, / That I may never leave this place' (stanza 77). As the flood recedes, to reveal a landscape cleansed and restored to pristine innocence,... | |
| Andrew Marvell - 1986 - 308 стор.
...shot Can make, or me it toucheth not. But I on it securely play, And gall its horsemen all the day. 77 Bind me, ye woodbines, in your twines, Curl me about ye gadding vines, 610 And O so close your circles lace, That I may never leave this place: But, lest your fetters prove... | |
| Margarita Stocker - 1922 - 162 стор.
...iron gates of life : Thus, though we cannot make our sun Stand still, yet we will make him run ; in : Bind me, ye woodbines, in your twines, Curl me about, ye gadding vines, like a bound of the heart, and in the intoxicated surrender of personal identity in the famous Garden... | |
| Patsy Griffin - 1995 - 228 стор.
...York. He commands his communicants to hold him in the wood: Bind me ye Woodbines in your 'twines, Curie me about ye gadding Vines, And Oh so close your Circles lace, That I may never leave this Place. (609-12) The temptation to remain ("Oh what a Pleasure 'tis to hedge / My Temples here with heavy sedge"... | |
| Susan Snyder - 1998 - 268 стор.
...around him is soon invoked as a stay against his departure. Bind me ye Woodbines in your 'twines, Curle me about ye gadding Vines, And Oh so close your Circles lace, That I may never leave this Place. (609-12) Why is it necessary to tie him up in order to keep him where he purportedly wants to be? The... | |
| Marshall Grossman - 2002 - 284 стор.
...religio-erotic fantasies articulated later in the poem: Bind me ye Woodbines in your twines, Curie me about ye gadding Vines, And Oh so close your Circles lace, That 1 may never leave this Place: But, lest your Fetters prove too weak, Ere I your Silken Bondage break,... | |
| Monica Randall - 2003 - 312 стор.
...west staircase. Etched on a slab of a marble garden bench that stood nearby was a piece of poetry: Bind me, ye woodbines, in your 'twines, Curl me about,...your circles lace That I may never leave this place. — The Last Essays of Elia by Charles Lamb Those words had a strangely prophetic ring. In the surrounding... | |
| Edward Thomas - 2005 - 302 стор.
...shot Can make, or me it toucheth not, But I on it securely play, And gall its horsemen all the day. Bind me, ye woodbines in your twines. Curl me about,...your circles lace, That I may never leave this place! Here was a youth not much past seventeen. In his face the welt schmerz contends with the pride in his... | |
| Gerald Monsman - 1984 - 184 стор.
...house — I was told of such — what were they to me, being out of the boundaries of my Eden? — So far from a wish to roam, I would have drawn, methought,...securer cincture of those excluding garden walls. (2:155) For the child there will be no tempting a watery fate as in "Ears" or in "Witches," no plunge... | |
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