The Works of the English Poets: Broome and PittH. Hughs, 1779 |
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Halaman 13
... a consciousness of my own deficiency : I have in reality been pleading my own caufe , that if I appear too guilty to obtain a pardon , I may find fo much mercy mercy from my judges , as to be condemned to PREFACE . 13.
... a consciousness of my own deficiency : I have in reality been pleading my own caufe , that if I appear too guilty to obtain a pardon , I may find fo much mercy mercy from my judges , as to be condemned to PREFACE . 13.
Halaman 40
... appears ; While regularly bold , fhe nobly fings Strains , worthy to detain the ears of kings ; If by thy hand th ' Homeric lyre be strung , The lyre returns fuch founds as Homer fung : The kind compulfion of a friend obey , And though ...
... appears ; While regularly bold , fhe nobly fings Strains , worthy to detain the ears of kings ; If by thy hand th ' Homeric lyre be strung , The lyre returns fuch founds as Homer fung : The kind compulfion of a friend obey , And though ...
Halaman 42
... appear'd his native reign , His wayward mates th ' Æolian bag unbind , Expecting treasures , but out rufh'd a wind ; The fudden hurricane in thunder roars , Buffets the bark , and whirls it from the fhores . O heaven ! by what vain ...
... appear'd his native reign , His wayward mates th ' Æolian bag unbind , Expecting treasures , but out rufh'd a wind ; The fudden hurricane in thunder roars , Buffets the bark , and whirls it from the fhores . O heaven ! by what vain ...
Halaman 54
... appears ! A God , a God , defcending angels fing , And mighty Seraphs fhout , Behold your King ! Hail virgin - born ! lift , lift ye blind your eyes ! Sing O ye dumb ! and O ! ye dead arife ! Tremble ye gates of hell ! in nobleft ...
... appears ! A God , a God , defcending angels fing , And mighty Seraphs fhout , Behold your King ! Hail virgin - born ! lift , lift ye blind your eyes ! Sing O ye dumb ! and O ! ye dead arife ! Tremble ye gates of hell ! in nobleft ...
Halaman 65
... appears , Towers o'er the field of death ; as fierce he turns , Keen flash his arms , and all the hero burns ; His plume nods horrible , his helm on high With cheeks of iron glares against the sky ; With martial stalk , and more than ...
... appears , Towers o'er the field of death ; as fierce he turns , Keen flash his arms , and all the hero burns ; His plume nods horrible , his helm on high With cheeks of iron glares against the sky ; With martial stalk , and more than ...
Edisi yang lain - Lihat semua
Istilah dan frasa umum
Æneid arms Atrides Bard beauties beneath bleft blooming bofom breaſt breathe bright charms death defcends diftant dreadful earth Ev'n eyes facred fair fame fate fcorn feas fhades fhall fhines fhores fhould fierce fighs fight filent fing fire fkies flain flames fleep flies floods FLORUS flowers fmiles foft fome fong fons forrows foul fpread fpring ftill ftorms ftreams fubject fuch fweet fwell glorious glory Gods grace Greece heaven hero hofts honours Iliad immortal Jove juft king labours laſt Latian Latium lefs loft Lord LYCIDAS lyre mighty Mufe Muſe muſt numbers nymph o'er plain pleas'd pleaſe pleaſure Poet praiſe proud purſue rage Rainham raiſe rife riſe roar rofe ſcenes ſhade ſhall ſhe ſhines ſkies ſky ſtate ſtrains tears thee thefe theſe thofe thoſe thou thouſand Thracian thunder toils trembling Troy vaft verfe whofe WILLIAM BROOME youth
Bagian yang populer
Halaman 65 - in fair virtue's caufe, From thy own life tranfcribe th' unerring laws ; Teach a bad world beneath her fway to bend, To verfe like thine fierce favages attend, And men more fierce! When Orpheus tunes the lay, Ev'n fiends relenting hear their rage away. * See the i6th
Halaman 62 - Thou and Homer die ; When fink together in the world's laft fires What heaven created, and what heaven infpires. If aught on earth, when once this breath is fled, With human tranfport touch the mighty dead ; Shakefpeare rejoice ! his hand thy page refines, Now every fcene with native brightnefs
Halaman 128 - A ftream, that filently but fwiftly glides To meet eternity's immeafur'd tides ! A being, loft alike by pain or joy! A fly can kill it, or a worm deftroy ! Impair'd by labour, and by eafe undone, Commenc'd in tears, and ended in a groan ! Ev'n while I write, the tranfient NOW is paft, And death more near this fentence,
Halaman 337 - Homer * deck the gorgeous car, When our rais'd fouls are eager for the war ? Or dwell on every wheel, when loud alarms, And Mars in thunder calls the hofts to arms ? When with his heroes we fome daftard f find, Of a vile afpeft, and malignant mind ; His awkward figure is not worth our care;
Halaman 63 - on thy immortal brow. Thus when thy draughts, O Raphael, time invades, And the bold figure from the canvas fades ; A rival hand recalls from every part Some latent grace, and equals art with art;
Halaman 62 - Reptiles of earth, and beings of a day ! 'Tis thine, on every heart to grave thy praife, A monument which worth alone can raife ; Sure to furvive, when time (hall whelm in duft, The arch, the marble, and the mimic buft
Halaman 363 - Oh fire ! oh country, once with glory crown'd ! Oh wretched race of Priam, once renown'd ! Oh Jove ! fee Ilion fmoaking on the ground ! They now name Ceres for the golden grain, Bacchus for wine, and Neptune for the main : Or from the father's name point out the fon ; Or for her people introduce a town
Halaman 401 - replies, you rave ; The gods refume that reafon which they gave ; For Heaven deep wifdom to the fool fupplies, But oft infatuates and confounds the wife. And wifdom once was thine ! but now I find The gods have ruin'd thy diftemper'd mind. How could you hope your
Halaman 30 - calm the evening ! fee the falling day -*- -*- Gilds every mountain with a ruddy ray! In gentle fighs the foftly whifpering breeze Salutes the flowers, and waves the trembling trees ; Hark ! the night-warbler, from yon vocal boughs, Glads every valley with melodious woes! Swift through the air her rounds the fwallow takes, Or fportive
Halaman 50 - vales, where zephyrs ever play ! Ye woods, where little warblers tune their lay ! Here grant me, heaven, to end my peaceful days, And fteal myfelf from life by flow decays; Draw health from food the temperate garden yields, From fruit, or herb, the bounty of the fields