| Clarence Edward Andrews - 1918 - 352 str.
...To attempt to quote is difficult, but here are a few lines chosen more- or less at random: He knows the seat of Paradise, Could tell in what degree it lies, And, as he was dispoa'd, could prove it Below the moon, or else above it; What Adam dreamt of, when his bride Came... | |
| Sir Herbert John Clifford Grierson - 1921 - 316 str.
...sores of faith are cur'd again ; Although by woful proof we find, They always leave a Scar behind. He knew the Seat of Paradise, Could tell in what degree it lies : And, as he was dispos'd, could prove it, Below the Moon, or else above it : no What Adam dreamt of when his Bride... | |
| John Augustine Zahm - 1922 - 554 str.
...that the problem was so simple that it could be answered off-hand. They were quite like Hudibras who Knew the seat of Paradise, Could tell in what degree it lies, And as he was disposed could prove it Above the moon or below it. In a letter purporting to have been written to the Emperor Manual Comnenus,... | |
| Tom Peete Cross, Clement Tyson Goode - 1927 - 1432 str.
...sores of Faith are cured again; Although by woful proof we find They always leave a scar behind. 170 iendship is feigning, most loving mere folly. Then...most jolly. 10 Freeze, freeze, thou bitter sky, That What Adam dreamt of, when his bride 175 Came from her closet in his side; Whether the devil tempted... | |
| 1885 - 888 str.
...with easy minds; how in the days of Hudibras, the scholar " Knew the seat of paradise, Could tell us in what degree it lies; And, as he was disposed, could prove it Below the moon or else above it." Coming to the day when scientific methods were more critical, he will see that the question of the... | |
| 1885 - 940 str.
...with easy minds ; how in the days of Hudibras, the scholar " Knew the seat of paradise, Could tell us in what degree it lies; And, as he was disposed, could prove it Below the moon or els« above it." Coming to the day when scientific methods were more critical, he will see that the... | |
| 1885 - 896 str.
...the days of Hudibras, the scholar " Knew (he seat of paradise, Could tell us in what degree it liée; And, as he was disposed, could prove it Below the moon or else above it." Coming to the day when scientific methods were more critical, he will see that the question of the... | |
| 1920 - 726 str.
...Most writers on the earth are content to let the future, at least, alone. Butler says of Burnet, in Hudibras : He knew the seat of Paradise, Could tell...disposed could prove it Below the Moon or else above it. Whiston (1696) christened his work "A new theory of the earth ; wherein the creation of the world in... | |
| Joseph Ellis Duncan - 1972 - 349 str.
...others to reconstruct the lives of Adam and Eve. His blockheaded Puritan knight erring, Sir Hudibras, knew the Seat of Paradise, Could tell in what degree it lies: And as he was dispos'd, could prove it Below the Moon, or else above it. What Adam dreamt of when his Bride Came... | |
| David Daiches - 1979 - 336 str.
...understood b' implicit Faith, What ever Sceptick could inquere for; For every why he had a wherefore; . . He knew the seat of Paradise, Could tell in what degree it lies, And, as he was dispos'd, could prove it Below the Moon, or else above it. What Adam dreamt of when his Bride Came... | |
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