| Percy Bysshe Shelley - 1905 - 502 sider
...dross that checks its flight To its own likeness, as each mass may bear; And bursting in its beauty and its might From trees and beasts and men into the Heaven's light. XLIV The splendours of the firmament of time May be eclipsed, but are extinguished not; Like stars... | |
| George Winston Reid - 1905 - 202 sider
...dross that checks its flight To its own likeness, as each mass may bear; And bursting in its beauty and its might From trees and beasts and men into the Heaven's light." 3 From the earliest times man has recognized the power and the mystery of fire. " ' Know ye,' said... | |
| Percy Bysshe Shelley - 1905 - 978 sider
...that checks its flight To its own likeness, as each mass may bear ; 385 And bursting in its beauty and its might From trees and beasts and men into the Heaven's light. XLIV The splendours of the firmament of time May be eclipsed, but are extinguished not ; Like stars... | |
| Harold Bloom - 1971 - 516 sider
...dross that checks its flight To its own likeness, as each mass may bear; And bursting in its beauty and its might From trees and beasts and men into the Heaven's light. This majestic stanza completes one aspect of Shelley's imaginative apprehension of reality. The Spirit... | |
| Meyer Howard Abrams - 1973 - 564 sider
...love," ceaselessly working to force all things "to its own likeness," And bursting in its beauty and its might From trees and beasts and men into the Heaven's light. And even while Shelley as individual succumbs to the attraction of an immediate return to "the fire... | |
| William Makepeace Thackeray - 1879 - 820 sider
...that checks its flight To its own likeness, as each mass may bear ; And bursting in its beauty and its might From trees, and beasts, and men, into the heaven's light. There are important differences, as the metaphysician would point out, between the two conceptions,... | |
| Jerrold E. Hogle - 1989 - 433 sider
...observable entities that we find the force that "walks the waves" continually "bursting in its beauty and its might / From trees and beasts and men into the Heaven's light" (ll. 386-87). This revision of Spenser and Milton, we can even say, draws their figures back, quite... | |
| Michael Oakeshott - 1985 - 372 sider
...concrete reality must, indeed, supersede the world of practical experience, but can never take its place. The splendours of the firmament of time May be eclipsed, but are extinguished not. VI CONCLUSION It is, I suppose, the ambition of everyone who thinks to understand himself, and of every... | |
| Percy Bysshe Shelley - 1994 - 752 sider
...dross that checks its flight To its own likeness, as each mass may bear; And bursting in its beauty and its might From trees and beasts and men into the Heaven's light. 44 The splendours of the firmament of time May be eclipsed, but are extinguished not; Like stars to... | |
| Carl R. Woodring, James Shapiro - 1995 - 936 sider
...dross that checks its flight To its own likeness, as each mass may bear; And bursting in its beauty and its might From trees and beasts and men into the Heaven's light. XLIV The splendours of the firmament of time May be eclipsed, but are extinguished not; Like stars... | |
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