I had seen in my sleep. And the sonnet I made was this : — To every heart which the sweet pain doth move, And unto which these words may now be brought For true interpretation and kind thought, Be greeting in our Lord's name, which is Love. Of those... Dante - Page 118by National Dante committee - 1916 - 64 pagesFull view - About this book
| 1861 - 528 pages
...should write unto them those things which I had seen in my sleep. And the sonnet I mode was this : — To every heart which the sweet pain doth move, And...thought, Be greeting in our Lord's name, which is Love. * " Behold thy heart." Of those long hours wherein the stars, above, Wake and keep watch, the third... | |
| Sir John Skelton - 1865 - 398 pages
...two allusions to natural forms in a poem which was written in the Val d'Arno. He speaks in one place of those long hours ' wherein the stars above wake and keep watch;' and in another, he says, ' as I have seen snow fall among the rain, so was there talk mingled with... | |
| Dante Alighieri - 1897 - 538 pages
...should write unto them those things which I had seen in my sleep. And the sonnet I made was this : — To every heart which the sweet pain doth move, And...stars, above, Wake and keep watch, the third was almost naught, When Love was shown me with such terrors fraught As may not carelessly be spoken of. He seemed... | |
| Dante Alighieri - 1897 - 522 pages
...should write unto them those things which I had seen in my sleep. And the sonnet I made was this : — To every heart which the sweet pain doth move, And...stars, above, Wake and keep watch, the third was almost naught,. When Love was shown me with such terrors fraught As may not carelessly be spoken of. He seemed... | |
| Dante Gabriel Rossetti - 1904 - 456 pages
...should write unto them those things which I had seen in my sleep. And the sonnet I made was this : — To every heart which the sweet pain doth move, And...brought ' For true interpretation and kind thought, X-''' Be greeting in our TJord'sname, which is .Love. ^ ' .' Of those long hours wherein the stars,... | |
| Christopher Hare, Marian Andrews - 1905 - 454 pages
...il dir presente, A ciò che mi riscrivan suo parvente, Salute in lor signer, cioe Amore. . . ." f (" To every heart which the sweet pain doth move And...thought, Be greeting in our Lord's name, which is Love. . . .") * To which Guido replied in another sonnet, wherein he interprets the dream of Dante. It begins:... | |
| Marie-Louise Egerton Castle - 1910 - 156 pages
...should write unto them those things which I had seen in my sleep. And the sonnet I made was this : " ' To every heart which the sweet pain doth move, And...stars above Wake and keep watch, the third was almost naught When Love was shown me with such terrors fraught As may not carelessly be spoken of. He seemed... | |
| Dante Gabriel Rossetti - 1911 - 732 pages
...should write unto them those things which I had seen in my sleep. And the sonnet I made was this : — To every heart which the sweet pain doth move, And unto which these words may now be brought • Ovii <q!«l irate e/i^Lcpai, dAAa faoio. (Iliad, zxiv. 258.) t " I am thy master." t " Behold thy... | |
| Delphian Society - 1911 - 576 pages
...should write nnto them those things which I h*ii seen in my sleep. And the sonnet I made was this: To every heart which the sweet pain doth move, And unto which the5e words may now be hrvu^lit For true interpretation and kind thought. Be greeting in our Lord's... | |
| POEMS & TRANSLATIONS - 1915 - 440 pages
...should write unto them those things which I had seen in my sleep. And the sonnet I made was this:— To every heart which the sweet pain doth move, And...third was almost nought When Love was shown me with smch terrors fraught As may not carelessly be spoken of. He seem'd like one who is full of joy, and... | |
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