| Tom Clark - Poetry - 1995 - 252 pages
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| 梁柱東 - 1995 - 1042 pages
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| William Blake - English poetry - 1998 - 340 pages
...reply. He is watchful, while they are in peace, For they know when their shepherd is nigh. Infant Joy 'I have no name; I am but two days old'. What shall...days old, Sweet joy I call thee. Thou dost smile; 10 I sing the while. Sweet joy befall thee. On Another's Sorrow Can I see another's woe, And not be... | |
| Larry Niven, Jerry Pournelle, Steven Barnes - Fiction - 1996 - 516 pages
...don't you invite Cadmann along, and we'll have a place to talk." She nodded her head. 27 GEOGRAPHK Pretty joy! Sweet joy but two days old, Sweet joy...dost smile, I sing the while Sweet joy befall thee. — WILLIAM BLAKE, Infant Joy The Minervas were the fusion-powered landing craft brought from Sol system.... | |
| William Blake - 1996 - 180 pages
...ambiguity of the word 'joy'? In what way might this poem suggest that innocence is a perilous condition? 'I have no name, I am but two days old/ What shall I call thee? 'I happy am, 5 Joy is my name.' Sweet joy befall thee! Pretty joy! Sweet joy but two days old, Sweet joy I call... | |
| Kathryn S. Freeman - Literary Criticism - 1997 - 222 pages
...questions. Blake addresses the problem of naming most subtly in "Infant Joy," a song of innocence: I have no name I am but two days old. — What shall...happy am Joy is my name, — Sweet joy befall thee! (E. 16, lines 1-6) Repeating at the end of the second stanza the last line of this first stanza —... | |
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