| Giuseppe Mazzini - 1891 - 356 pages
...Manfred, about to die, exclaims — " The mind, which is immortal, makes itself Requital for its good and evil thoughts — Is its own origin of ill, and end — And its own place and time, its innate sense, When stripped of this mortality, derives No colour from the fleeting things without,... | |
| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1892 - 324 pages
...that I know : What I have done is done ; I bear within A torture which could nothing gain from thine : The mind which is immortal makes itself Requital for...origin of ill and end — And its own place and time — its innate sense, When stripp'd of this mortality, derives No colour from the fleeting things without... | |
| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1893 - 368 pages
...that I know: What I have done is done; I bear within A torture which could nothing gain from thine : The mind which is immortal makes itself Requital for...origin of ill and end — And its own place and time — its innate sense, When stripp'd of this mortality, derives No color from the fleeting things without;... | |
| Malcolm Kingsley Macmillan - 1893 - 342 pages
...universe is nothing — " The mind which is immortal makes itself Requital of its good and evil deeds, Is its own origin of ill and end, And its own place and time." That is Manichean, if you will. But it is not atheistic. For it declares the mind, which is of God,... | |
| John Nichol - 1894 - 240 pages
...Scott of forgery, Marlowe and Goethe of compacts with the deviL Byron was no dramatist, but he had wit enough to vary at least the circumstances of his...lyrics scattered through the poem sometimes open well, eg,— Mont Blanc is the monarch of mountains ; They crowned him long ago, On a throne of rocks, in... | |
| 1894 - 706 pages
...of his projected personality. The memories of both Fausts—the Elizabethan and the German—mingle, in the pages of this piece, with shadows of the author's...lyrics scattered through the poem sometimes open well, eg,— Mont Blanc is the monarch of mountains; They crowned him long ago, On a throne of rocks, in... | |
| John Clark Ridpath - 1903 - 548 pages
...that beginning " The mind, which is immortal, makes itself Requital for its good or evil thoughts, Its own origin of ill and end. And its own place and...in transplanting it from Marlowe. The author's own favorite passage, the invocation to the sun, has some sublimity, marred by lapses. The lyrics scattered... | |
| John Clark Ridpath - 1898 - 564 pages
...that beginning " The mind, which is immortal, makes itself Requital for its good or evil thoughts, Its own origin of ill and end, And its own place and...in transplanting it from Marlowe. The author's own favorite passage, the invocation to the sun, has some sublimity, marred by lapses. The lyrics scattered... | |
| Heinrich Gillardon - 1898 - 124 pages
...awaken'd from the dream of life Byron tetlt 6iefes Scfjtpanfen Sfyelley's. So fagt er 2Hanfre6 III 3,: The mind which is immortal makes itself Requital for...own origin of ill and end And its own place and time — its innate sense When stripped of this mortality, derives No colour from the fleeting things without;... | |
| Charles Kingsley - 1898 - 438 pages
...but by our own consciousness of being what we are : The mind which is immortal, makes itself Keqnital for its good or evil thoughts ; Is its own origin of ill, and end — And its own place and time — its innate sensa When stript of this mortality derives No colour from the fleeting things about,... | |
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