As tho' to breathe were life ! Life piled on life Were all too little, and of one to me Little remains ; but every hour is saved From that eternal silence, something more, A bringer of new things : and vile it were For some three suns to store .and hoard... Primer First (-Fourth, Sixth) reader - Сторінка 257автори: Public school series - 1874Повний перегляд - Докладніше про цю книгу
 | David Brown - 2004 - 428 стор.
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 | Robert D. Denham, Robert Dayton Denham - 2004 - 373 стор.
...experience," an order beyond the dialectic of freedom and concern (170). Like Tennyson's Ulysses, who wants "To follow knowledge like a sinking star, / Beyond the utmost bound of human thought," Frye keeps struggling to reach beyond the limits of imaginative desire. In The Educated Imagination... | |
 | Deborah Forbes, Independent Scholar Deborah Forbes - 2004 - 244 стор.
...final way to choose between these two readings. When we examine lines such as those describing the desire "[t]o follow knowledge like a sinking star / Beyond the utmost bound of human thought,"69 we might object that knowledge and movement are being falsely conflated here, because the... | |
 | George S. Lensing - 2004 - 392 стор.
...the distant "Happy Isles." He too will venture "beyond" in seeking his own knowledge that awaits him: "To follow knowledge like a sinking star, / Beyond the utmost bound of human thought."63 The second part of "Prologues to What Is Possible," following his boast of total self-sufficiency,... | |
 | Edward Leeson - 2004 - 703 стор.
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