Poetical Works: With the Life of the Author, Bind 3Cadell and Davies, etc. and Samuel Bagster, 1807 |
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Side 25
... dull amazement beforehand , At what they would , but could not understand , And grew impatient to discover what The matter was they so much wonder'd at . 50 Quoth he , Th ' old inhabitants o ' th ' Moon , Who , when the sun shines ...
... dull amazement beforehand , At what they would , but could not understand , And grew impatient to discover what The matter was they so much wonder'd at . 50 Quoth he , Th ' old inhabitants o ' th ' Moon , Who , when the sun shines ...
Side 76
... dull eyes , The remedy of a defect , With which our nakedness is deckt : Yet makes us swell with pride , and boast , As if we ' ad gain'd by being lost . All this is nothing to the evils Which men , and their confed'rate devils Inflict ...
... dull eyes , The remedy of a defect , With which our nakedness is deckt : Yet makes us swell with pride , and boast , As if we ' ad gain'd by being lost . All this is nothing to the evils Which men , and their confed'rate devils Inflict ...
Side 87
... dull sentence , and a moral fable , Do more than all our holdings - forth are able , A forc'd obscure mythology convince Beyond our worst inflictions upon sins ; When an old proverb , or an end of verse , Could more than all our penal ...
... dull sentence , and a moral fable , Do more than all our holdings - forth are able , A forc'd obscure mythology convince Beyond our worst inflictions upon sins ; When an old proverb , or an end of verse , Could more than all our penal ...
Side 89
... dull And stupid , as to fine for gull , ( Not , as in cities , to b ' excus'd , But to be judg'd fit to be us❜d , ) That whosoe'er can draw it in Is sure inevitably t ' win . And , with a curs'd half - witted fate , To grow more dully ...
... dull And stupid , as to fine for gull , ( Not , as in cities , to b ' excus'd , But to be judg'd fit to be us❜d , ) That whosoe'er can draw it in Is sure inevitably t ' win . And , with a curs'd half - witted fate , To grow more dully ...
Side 93
... dull fiend a thousand times , By whom I was possess'd , forswear all rhymes ; By having curs'd the Muses , they appear , To be reveng'd for't , ere I am aware . Spite of myself , I strait take fire agen , Fall to my task with paper ...
... dull fiend a thousand times , By whom I was possess'd , forswear all rhymes ; By having curs'd the Muses , they appear , To be reveng'd for't , ere I am aware . Spite of myself , I strait take fire agen , Fall to my task with paper ...
Almindelige termer og sætninger
admir'd admire agen allow'd ancient appear authors b'ing beast blood brain brave breed BRITISH PRINCES Butler chuse command conscience crimes cuckold curious dæmon dark oracle delight design'd draw dull e'er EARL OF ROSCOMMON Elephant equal ev'ry eyes fain false fancy Fate forc'd gain'd Gleek greater happy Heav'n Hence tis horses break Hudibras int'rest judge judgment king laws learn'd learned less liv'd Lord Roscommon mankind men's mighty Moon mouse Muse Nature ne'er never nice nobler nonsense numbers o'er Oliver Cromwell Ostrogoth pains paltry pass phænomenon PINDARIC plac'd plagiary play poem poetic poets poison'd pow'r praise princes Priscian resolv'd rest rhyme SATIRE scorn shew soul spite strive T'observe things thought thro trepan tricks true truth try'd turn'd twas Twill understand us'd venture verse wear wise wit and sense wont words worse writ write wrong zeal
Populære passager
Side 57 - Unhappy man takes pains to find, T" inflict himself upon his mind : And out of his own bowels spins A rack and torture for his sins ; Torments himself, in vain, to know That most which he can never do : And the more strictly 'tis...
Side 43 - P. Your wounds are but without, and mine within : You wound my heart, and I but prick your skin ; And while your eyes pierce deeper than my claws, You blame the effect of which you are the cause.
Side 133 - LAW does not put the least restraint Upon our freedom, but maintain 't ; Or if it does, 'tis for our good, To give us freer latitude : For wholesome laws preserve us free, By stinting of our liberty.
Side 11 - And gain'da Pass, to hold dispute With all the Planets that stand out; To carry this most virtuous War, Home to the Door of every Star, And plant th' Artillery of our Tubes Against their proudest Magnitudes ; To stretch our Victories beyond Th...
Side 147 - Immodest words admit of no defence; For want of decency is want of sense.
Side 147 - On sure foundations let your fabric rise, And with attractive majesty surprise; Not by affected meretricious arts, But strict harmonious symmetry of parts ; Which through the whole insensibly must pass, With vital heat to animate the mass: A pure, an active, an auspicious flame ; And bright as heaven, from whence the blessing came: But few, oh!
Side 147 - Art; For tho Materials have long since been found, Yet both your fancy and your Hands are bound, And by Improving what was writ Before, Invention Labours Less, but Judgment more.
Side 5 - To take an invent'ry of all Her real estate, and personal ; And make an accurate survey Of all her lands, and how they lay, As true as that of Ireland, where The sly surveyors stole a shire : T' observe her country, how 'twas planted, With what sh...
Side 133 - But man delights to have his ears Blown maggots in by flatterers. ALL wit does but divert men from the road In which things vulgarly are understood, And force mistake and ignorance to own A better sense than commonly is known. IN little trades more cheats and lying Are used in selling, than in buying; But in the great unjuster dealing, Is used in buying, than in selling.