| Pat Rogers - Berkshire (England) - 2004 - 284 pages
...totally overlooked: Now, like a Maiden Queen, she will behold, From her high Turrets, hourly Sutors come: The East with Incense, and the West with Gold,...Will stand, like Suppliants, to receive her doom. (1185-88) The many verbal parallels here (doom, suppliant, sue/Sutors) are less important than an identity... | |
| Steven N. Zwicker - Literary Criticism - 2004 - 322 pages
...of Modern pride. 66 Now, like a Maiden Queen, she will behold, From her high Turrets, hourly Sutors come: The East with Incense, and the West with Gold,...Will stand, like Suppliants, to receive her doom. (Works i: 103-4, lines 1177-88) As the proud center of a global network, the modern City of London... | |
| John Dryden - Poetry - 2002 - 612 pages
...fame, but rude and low, 88 ANNUS MIRABILIS 1667 297 1 185 Now, like a maiden queen, she will behold From her high turrets hourly suitors come: The East...gold Will stand like suppliants to receive her doom. 298 The silver Thames, her own domestic flood, 1 190 Shall bear her vessels like a sweeping train;... | |
| Popular educator - 1860 - 424 pages
...to ns from the Italian torréfia. " Mow like a maiden queen she will behold. From her high turrits, hourly suitors come ; The east with incense, and the west with gold. Will stand like eupplianU to receive her doom." Dryden. Eth, the old termination of the third person singular of the... | |
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