. _:vb6916465 "1596, The Raigne of King Edvvard the third:\u00A0[\u2026], London: Cuthbert Burby, unnumbered page:"@en . _:vb6916465 "[\u2026] Phillip the younger issue of the king, / Coting the other hill in such arraie, / That all his guilded vpright pikes do seeme, / Streight trees of gold, the pendant leaues, / And their deuice of Antique heraldry, / Quartred in collours seeming sundy fruits, / Makes it the Orchard of the Hesperides, [\u2026]"@en . _:vb6916466 "Not that great Champion of the antique world, / Whom famous Poets verse so much doth daunt, / And hath for twelue huge labours high extold, / So many furies and sharp fits did haunt, / \u00A0[\u2026]"@en . _:vb6916465 . _:vb6916466 . _:vb6916467 "1842, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Essays on the Greek Christian Poets and the English Poets, New York: James Miller, published 1863, page 179:"@en . _:vb6916467 . _:vb6916468 . _:vb6916468 "1851, George William Curtis, Nile Notes of a Howadji, New York: Harper & Brothers, page 159:"@en . _:vb6916466 "1609, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Qveene, Disposed Into XII. Bookes, Fashioning twelue Morall Vertues, London: Mathew Lownes, book 1, canto 11, verse 27, page 51:"@en . _:vb6916467 "From the rest they stand out contrastingly, as the Apollo of the later Greek sculpture-school,\u2014too graceful for divinity and too vivacious for marble,\u2014placed in a company of the antiquer statues with their grand blind look of the almightiness of repose."@en . "1" . _:vb6916464 "Having existed in ancient times, descended from antiquity; used especially in reference to Greece and Rome."@en . _:vb6916464 . _:vb6916468 "Believe an impartial Howadji who has no Cangie or other boats to let at Mahratta, that Nubia is a very different land from Egypt, and that you have not penetrated antiquest Egypt, until you have been awe-stricken by the silence which was buried ages ago in Aboo Simbel, and by the hand-folded Osiride figures, that people, like dumb and dead Gods, that dim, demonic hall."@en .