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" SHALL I like a hermit dwell On a rock or in a cell, Calling home the smallest part That is missing of my heart, To bestow it where I may Meet a rival every day ? If she undervalue me, What care I how fair she be... "
Poetry and Poets: A Collection of the Choicest Anecdotes Relative to the ... - Page 43
by Richard Ryan - 1826
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The Shakespeare Anthology: 1592-1616 A. D.

Edward Arber - English poetry - 1899 - 334 pages
...head ! Then am I ready, like a Palmer fit, To tread those blest paths ; which before I writ. M 161 SHALL I (like a hermit) dwell On a rock, or in a cell,...me ; What care I, how fair She be! Were her tresses angel-gold ; If a stranger may be bold, Unrebuked, unafraid, > .. To convert them to a braid ; And,...
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British Anthologies, Volume 4

Edward Arber - English poetry - 1901 - 358 pages
...everlasting head! Then am I ready, like a Palmer fit, To tread those blest paths; which before I writ. SHALL I (like a hermit) dwell On a rock, or in a cell,...of my heart, To bestow it, where I may Meet a rival even' day ? If She undervalue me; What care I, how fair She be! Were her tresses angel-gold; If a stranger...
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The Book of Elizabethan Verse

William Stanley Braithwaite - English poetry - 1907 - 892 pages
...Cayley in his Life, and retained by Dr. Hannah in his Courtly Poets, p. 82, begins: Shall I, like an hermit, dwell On a rock or in a cell, Calling home...If she undervalue me, What care I how fair she be ? PAGE 261, No. 299 — Hence away, you Sirens, leave me. In conscience lor me icvuy 01 nis earner...
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Poems of love, pt. 1

Poetry - 1912 - 408 pages
...if she be not for me, What care I for whom she be? George Wither [1588-1667] HIS FURTHER RESOLUTION SHALL I (like a hermit) dwell On a rock or in a cell;...me, What care I how fair she be! Were her tresses angel-gold; If a stranger may be bold, Unrebuked, and unafraid, To convert them to a braid; And, with...
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Parodies and Imitations Old and New

J. A. Stanley Adam, Bernard C. White - English poetry - 1912 - 620 pages
...way, considered Raleigh his ather in literature. Another Answer to Wither [Parody— G. Wither] CHALL I, like a hermit, dwell On a rock, or in a cell, Calling...me, What care I how fair she be ? Were her tresses angel-gold, If a stranger may be bold Unrebuked, unafraid, To convert them to a braid, And, with little...
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Airy Nothings: Or, What You Will

Charles Crittenton Baldwin - 1917 - 160 pages
...other poets sing, and so — JONSON: Let us hear what you have to say to them, sir. RALEIGH [reading] : Shall I like a hermit dwell, On a rock, or in a cell...If she undervalue me, What care I how fair she be? MARY [as though to herself]: If he undervalue me, what care I how rich he be ? RALEIGH [overhearing...
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The Home Book of Verse, American and English, 1580-1918, Volume 1

American poetry - 1918 - 2030 pages
...if she be not for me, What care I for whom she be? George Wither [158.8-1667] HIS FURTHER RESOLUTION SHALL I (like a hermit) dwell On a rock or in a cell;...me, What care I how fair she be! Were her tresses angel-gold; If a stranger may be bold, Unrebuked, and unafraid, To convert them to a braid; And, with...
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The Hermit in English Literature from the Beginnings to 1660

Charles Preston Weaver - English literature - 1924 - 148 pages
...characteristically in the lyric attributed to Sir Walter Raleigh :175 "Shall I like a hermit dwell On a rocki™ or in a cell, Calling home the smallest part That is missing of my heart, To bestow it when I may Meet a rival every day?" A sympathetic and subjective analysis of the hermit, on the other...
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Contribution to Education

Education - 1924 - 152 pages
...characteristically in the lyric attributed to Sir Walter Raleigh:175 "Shall I like a hermit dwell On a rock176 or in a cell, Calling home the smallest part That is missing of my heart, To bestow it when I may Meet a rival every day?" A sympathetic and subjective analysis of the hermit, on the other...
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London Magazine Enlarged and Improved, Volume 47

English periodicals - 1778 - 658 pages
...Vfb'^b it htrTi.*wcd a fawuritc Seng, futtg ttii Siafai at Vauxhall by Mr. Vcrnon. SHALL I, like an hermit, dwell On a rock, or in a cell ? Calling home the (mailed part That is miffing of my heart j To bellow it— where I may JWect a rival every day. —If...
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