Flower of the Mind by Alice Christiana Thompson Meynell
page 34 of 45 (75%)
page 34 of 45 (75%)
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-that of famine. Flecno, it will be remembered, was a poet, and
poor; but the joke of his bad verses was hardly needed, so fine does Marvell find that of his hunger. Perhaps there is no age of English satire that does not give forth the sound of that laughter unknown to savages--that craven laughter. THE PICTURE OF T. C. IN A PROSPECT OF FLOWERS The presence of a furtive irony of the sweetest kind is the sure sign of the visit of that unlooked-for muse. With all spirit and subtlety does Marvell pretend to offer the little girl T. C. (the future "virtuous enemy of man") the prophetic homage of the habitual poets. The poem closes with an impassioned tenderness not to be found elsewhere in Marvell. THE DEFINITION OF LOVE The noble phrase of the Horatian Ode is not recovered again, high or low, throughout Marvell's book, it we except one single splendid and surpassing passage from The Definition of Love - "Magnanimous despair alone Could show me so divine a thing." CHILDHOOD |
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