| Barrett Wendell - 1891 - 340 str.
...perceive The highest reaches of a human wit, — If these had made one poem's period, And all combined in beauty's worthiness, Yet should there hover in...the least, Which into words no virtue can digest." And this unspoken word is the final secret of beauty. Fifty years later, in that England of Cavaliers... | |
| 1891 - 432 str.
...one poem's period, And all combined in beauty's worthiness, Yet should there hover in their restiess heads One thought, one grace, one wonder, at the least, Which into words no virtue can digest." That charming writer, Adelaide Procter, has in our own day expressed a similar thought : No great Thinker... | |
| James Russell Lowell - 1892 - 350 str.
...perceive The highest reaches of a human wit ; — If these had made one poem's period, And all combined in beauty's worthiness, Yet should there hover in...the least, Which into words no virtue can digest." Marlowe made snatches at this forbidden fruit with vigorous leaps, and not without bringing away a... | |
| Henry Mills Alden, Frederick Lewis Allen, Lee Foster Hartman, Thomas Bucklin Wells - 1892 - 1142 str.
...perceive The highest reaches of a human wit ; — If these had made one poem's period, And all combined in beauty's worthiness, Yet should there hover in...the least, Which into words no virtue can digest." Marlowe made snatches at this forbidden fruit with vigorous leaps, and not without bringing away a... | |
| James Russell Lowell - 1892 - 156 str.
...perceive The highest reaches of a human wit ; — If these had made one poem's period, And all combined in beauty's worthiness, Yet should there hover in...the least, Which into words no virtue can digest." Marlowe made snatches at this forbidden fruit with vigorous leaps, and not without bringing away a... | |
| Henry Mills Alden, Frederick Lewis Allen, Lee Foster Hartman, Thomas Bucklin Wells - 1892 - 988 str.
...perceive The highest reaches of a human wit ; — If these had made one poem's period, And all combined in beauty's worthiness, Yet should there hover in...the least, Which into words no virtue can digest." Marlowe made snatches at this forbidden fruit with vigorous leaps, and not without bringing away a... | |
| James Russell Lowell - 1892 - 380 str.
...perceive The highest reaches of a human wit; — If these had made one poem's period, And all combined in beauty's worthiness, Yet should there hover in...the least, Which into words no virtue can digest." Marlowe made snatches at this forbidden fruit with vigorous leaps, and not without bringing away a... | |
| James Russell Lowell - 1892 - 368 str.
...a human wit ; — If these had made one poem's period, And all combined in beauty's worthiness, Tet should there hover in their restless heads One thought,...the least, Which into words no virtue can digest." Marlowe made snatches at this forbidden fruit with vigorous leaps, and not without bringing away a... | |
| 1925 - 562 str.
...gleam,— The light that never was on sea or land, The consecration and the poet's dream ; or Marlowe's — One thought, one grace, one wonder, at the least, Which into words no virtue can digest. If del Sarto had possessed this supreme gift his art would have gained, not suffered, from the fact... | |
| Francis Fisher Browne - 1892 - 426 str.
...before the poet's vision, whatever the beauty he may have succeeded in fixing upon the page, of the " One thought, one grace, one wonder, at the least, Which into words no virtue can digeet." By the critic, no less than the poet, this difficulty is felt when he seeks to digest into... | |
| |