| Hamilton Wright Mabie - 1909 - 250 pages
...into English, and some written originally in English, were finally collected and published in 1847. "Who will away to Athens with me? Who Loves choral...flowers Unenvious ? Mount the pinnace ; hoist the sail." To these exquisite poems the much-abused adjective " classical " belongs. They are perhaps the best... | |
| 1909 - 640 pages
...notes quivering, died away, Some shouted " Bravo," some had learned to pray. THRASYMEDES AND EUNOE. WHO will away to Athens with me ? Who Loves choral songs and maidens crowned with flowers Unenvious? Mount the pinnace ; hoist the sail, 1 promise ye, as many as are here,... | |
| Curtis Hidden Page - 1910 - 968 pages
...collections, and therefore not given here with the Hellenics, were ultimately included by Landor among them. wers of . yEgean isles Pour'd in libation at their solemn feasts : And the same goblets shall ye grasp. embossed... | |
| Ernest Rhys - 1913 - 410 pages
...and Eunof which is, in effect, the invocation to his Hellenics. " Who will to Athens," he cries — who " Loves choral songs and maidens crown'd with...vineyard or a plant ill-pruned, But such as anciently the .-Egean isles Pour'd in libation at their solemn feasts, And the same goblets shall ye grasp, embost... | |
| William Butler Yeats - 1918 - 556 pages
...flower and known what this fruit sends up, and it is now time to copy the East and live deliberately. Ye shall not, while ye tarry with me, taste From unrinsed...vineyard or a plant ill-pruned, But such as anciently the JEgean Isles Poured in libation at their solemn feasts: And the same goblets shall ye grasp embost... | |
| 1909 - 1212 pages
...into English, and some written originally in English, were finally collected and published in 1847. " Who will away to Athens with me ? Who Loves choral...flowers Unenvious ? Mount the pinnace ; hoist the sail !" To these exquisite poems the much-abused adjective " classical " belongs. They are perhaps the best... | |
| 1909 - 1190 pages
...into English, and some written originally in English, were finally collected and published in 1847. " Who will away to Athens with me ? Who Loves choral...flowers Unenvious? Mount the pinnace; hoist the sail!" To these exquisite poems the much-abused adjective " classical " belongs. They are perhaps the best... | |
| 1850 - 628 pages
...Greece, and the treatment is in accordance with that subject. The following challenge is made good, — ' I promise ye, as many as are here, Ye shall not, while...vineyard, or a plant ill-pruned, But such as anciently the JEgean isles Pour'd in libation at their solemn feasts.' The Hellenics have all the clear outline,... | |
| William Butler Yeats, Richard J. Finneran, George Bornstein - 2007 - 560 pages
...flower and known what this fruit sends up, and it is now time to copy the East and live deliberately. V Ye shall not, while ye tarry with me, taste From unrinsed...vineyard or a plant ill-pruned, But such as anciently the ^gean Isles Poured in libation at their solemn feasts: And the same goblets shall ye grasp embost With... | |
| 1892 - 514 pages
...influence of the old Greek thought and art upon modern poetry. The poems are introduced by the lines, " Who will away to Athens with me? who Loves choral songs and maidens crowned with flower Unenvious? Mount the pinnace; twist the sail." Whoever accepts this invitation... | |
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