| Kenneth Haynes - 2003 - 225 pages
...attended on her journey and when they came to the irremeable Stream that separated the two kingdoms, walked by her side into the water, in the middle of...may it go no further. The tears stand in my eyes. The apprehension of fate — destructive, imminent, and irrevocable — is made present by the Virgilian... | |
| Thomas Keymer, Jon Mee - 2004 - 332 pages
...attended on her journey and when they came to the irremeable Stream that separated the two kingdoms, walked by her side into the water, in the middle of...affection, pressed her to return. The Queen went forward' (Letters, iv: 343-4). As well as the wider world of the Club, Johnson was thus in the 17605 developing... | |
| Helen Deutsch - 2005 - 337 pages
...attended on her journey and when they came to the irremeable Stream that separated the two kingdoms, walked by her side into the water, in the middle of...may it go no further. The tears stand in my eyes. The errant geography of this comparison is striking — the Catholic Mary Stuart takes refuge in England... | |
| Helen Deutsch - 2005 - 337 pages
...attended on her journey and when they came to the irremeable Stream that separated the two kingdoms, walked by her side into the water, in the middle of...own affection, pressed her to return. The Queen went forward.—If the parallel reaches thus far; may it go no further. The tears stand in my eyes. The... | |
| 1785 - 512 pages
...he feized her bridle, and \vith earncftncfs pioportioned to her danger and his own affection prefled her to return. The Queen went forward. — If the parallel reaches thus far, may it go no farther,— The tears ftand in my eyes. " I am going into Derbyfhire, and hope to be followed by your... | |
| |