| Raymond Macdonald Alden - 1921 - 458 páginas
...machinery. Shakespeare makes something more of them, and adds to the mystery by explaining it: Tho earth hath bubbles as the water hath, And these are of them.' We have their physiognomy too: And enjoin'd silence, By each at once her choppy finger laying Upon... | |
| William Hazlitt, Percival Presland Howe - 1925 - 240 páginas
...ideal palaces, groves, and cities (realized to the bodily sense) everywhere rise up before you — ' The earth hath bubbles as the water hath, and these are of them ! ' You scale the heavens or descend into the tomb ; but you are always taken out of yourself, and... | |
| Jacob Johan van Rennes - 1927 - 194 páginas
...of a thrush, the sight of a village spire presents nothing discordant with the surrounding scenery. 2. Natural objects are more akin to poetry and the imagination, partly, because they are not our own handiwork, but start up spontaneously, like a visionary creation, of their own accord, without our... | |
| Jacob Johan van Rennes - 1927 - 186 páginas
...of a thrush, the sight of a village spire presents nothing discordant with the surrounding scenery. 2. Natural objects are more akin to poetry and the imagination, partly, because they are not our own handiwork, but start up spontaneously, like a visionary creation, of their own accord, without our... | |
| State Historical Society of Wisconsin - 1928 - 992 páginas
...humbug, got up only to mislead and lure us on to destruction. In the words of my old friend Shakespeare, The earth hath bubbles as the water hath, And these are of them. I said this project of free banking, though advocated under the specious cry of "equality" and "poor... | |
| 1855 - 1504 páginas
...mixture compounded of alum, carbonate of potash, almond-oil, sulphuric acid, and spirits of wine. " The earth hath bubbles as the water hath, and these are of them." One would think that it would be to the interest of the trade to keep their illicit practices " dark... | |
| 1908 - 1088 páginas
...treat his buildings as obviously temporary and evanescent, fragile fancies in fragile materials : — The earth hath bubbles as the water hath, And these are of them ? There is something to be said for either principle. Inigo Jones or Bramante would have preferred... | |
| 1901 - 1296 páginas
...longer and longer, and also like those phantoms of the brain, they 'come like shadows, so depart.' " 'The earth hath bubbles as the water hath, And these are of them.' "The masses of the people, the toiling millions, are soon to find in this great law of aggregation of capital... | |
| 1894 - 548 páginas
...him?" conveys to the audience the idea of a new and unexpected peril. la the exclamation of Banquo, " The earth hath bubbles, as the water hath, And these are of them" there is a crawling chill which refuses to be described or analysed, and owes its existence to the... | |
| William Lonsdale Watkinson, William Theophilus Davison - 1869 - 552 páginas
...pass off into the moonlight or sink into the hills like mist, equals anything of the kind we know. " The earth hath bubbles as the water hath, and these are of them." Here it is : — " The murmur of the mourning ghost That keeps the shadowy kino, 0, Keith of Ravelston,... | |
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