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" And lives, and dies ; and knows not why To live, but that he thus may never leave to die. "
Steps to the Temple: Delights of the Muses, and Other Poems - Page 269
by Richard Crashaw - 1904 - 401 pages
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The Poetical Works of Richard Crashaw and Quarles' Emblems, Page 102

Richard Crashaw, Francis Quarles, George Gilfillan - Emblems - 1857 - 414 pages
...not/why To live, but that he still may die./ How kindly will thy gentle heart, Kiss the sweetly killing dart: And close in his embraces keep Those delicious wounds that weep Balsam, to heal themselves with thus; When these thy deaths so numerous, no Shall all at once die into...
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The Complete Works of Richard Crashaw

Richard Crashaw - Engelse digkuns - 1858 - 384 pages
...dies, and knows not why To live, but that he still may die ! How kindly will thy gentle heart Kiss the sweetly-killing dart ! And close in his embraces keep Those delicious wounds, that weep Balsam, to heal themselves with thus, When these thy deaths, so numerous, Shall all at once die into...
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The Complete Works of Richard Crashaw, Volume 2

Richard Crashaw - 1873 - 562 pages
...death, in which who dyes Loues his death, and dyes again, And would for ever so be slain, And lines and dyes; and knowes not why To live, but that he thus may neuer leaue to dv.' It is deeply significant to find such a Hymn as that written while ' yet among...
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The Church quarterly review, Volumes 96-97

1923 - 826 pages
...funerall. His is the Dart must make the Death Whose stroke shall tast thy hallow'd breath. * • * * • And that there be Fitt executioners for Thee, The...To live, But that he thus may never leave to Dy.' It may perhaps interest some to recall that the first two verses of the hymn in the Breviary for Vespers...
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Poems of Richard Crashaw

Richard Crashaw - 1887 - 116 pages
...100 Loves his death, and dies again And would for ever so be slain. And lives, and dies ; and knows not why To live, but that he thus may never leave to die. How kindly will thy gentle heart 105 Kiss the sweetly-killing dart ! And close in his embraces...
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English Poems, Volumes 1-2

Richard Crashaw - Poets, English - 1900 - 290 pages
...dies Loves his death, and dies again, And would for ever so be slain. And lives, and dies ; and knows not why To live, but that he thus may never leave to die. HYMN TO S. TERESA. 89 How kindly will thy gentle heart Kiss the sweetly-killing dart ! And close...
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English Poems, Volumes 1-2

Richard Crashaw - Poets, English - 1900 - 296 pages
...dies Loves his death, and dies again, And would for ever so be slain. And lives, and dies ; and knows not why To live, but that he thus may never leave to die. How kindly will thy gentle heart Kiss the sweetly-killing dart ! And close in his embraces keep...
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The Oxford Book of English Verse, 1250-1900

Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch - English poetry - 1901 - 1190 pages
...dies, and knows not why To live, but that he still may die ! How kindly will thy gentle heart Kiss the sweetly-killing dart ! And close in his embraces keep Those delicious wounds, that weep Balsam, to heal themselves with thus, When these thy deaths, so numerous, Shall all at once die into...
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The English Poems of Richard Crashaw

Richard Crashaw - 1901 - 282 pages
...-- Loves his death, and dies again, And would for ever so be slain. And lives, and dies ; and knows not why To live, but that he thus may never leave to die. ' How kindly will thy gentle heart Kiss the sweetly-killing dart, And close in his embraces keep...
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Life in Poetry: Law in Taste: Two Series of Lectures Delivered in Oxford ...

William John Courthope - Aesthetics - 1901 - 474 pages
...Saint's experiences in the moment of death : How kindly will thy gentle heart Kiss the sweetly killing dart: And close in his embraces keep Those delicious wounds that weep Balsam, to heal themselves with thus ; When these thy deaths so numerous Shall all at once die into...
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