Description
MP3 Audio CD. Although even delicate touches or tints of color might be too always recounted in lighter tones or much glimmering notes of tireless and simplistic repetition. The tough learner who challenges his Herrick as a child who goes to school is likely to challenge his Horace, in an essence of obstinate and dull candor, will possibly seek himself before long so queasy by the relentless breath of flavors and blossoms, condiments and passions, that if a scented mouse had gone through the book it might barely be less bearable to the bodily than it is to the soulful gut. The wonderful and the violent blotches which warp and distort the beauty of his unsurpassed prodigy are only just so detrimental to his popularity as his universal dreariness of substance and of character. It was beyond question to ease this treacly and "mellisonant" dreariness that he presumed suitable to scatter these ceaseless droppings of natural or non-natural fragrance with others of the most fragrant to the least fragrant: though a regime of another confections and emetics is for the average of consumers and drinkers no less inedible than distasteful.Robert Herrick was a 17th century British lyric poet and cleric. He is highly known for Hesperides, a collection of poems. This contains the carpe diem poem "To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time", with the first line in the stanza "Gather ye rosebuds while ye may".Robert made more than 2,500 poems, part of which were seen in his famous collections, Hesperides. Hesperides also contains the much concise Noble Numbers, his first collection, of religious writings. He is known better for his writing finesse and, in his prime collections, for regular allusions to romance and femininity. His succeeding poetry was more of a devotional and theoretical in nature.
NZ$33.38
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