Poetical Works: With Notices of His Life, History of the Rowley Controversy, a Selection of His Letters, and Notes, Critical and Explanatory, Volume 2W. P. Grant, 1842 |
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Page 317
... POEMS . Page - Sly Dick A Hymn for Christmas - day Apostate Will Narva and Mored The Death of Nicou February A New Song Heccar and Gaira The Methodist Colin Instructed Kew Gardens 321 324 326 329 334 338 342 344 348 349 350 The Advice ...
... POEMS . Page - Sly Dick A Hymn for Christmas - day Apostate Will Narva and Mored The Death of Nicou February A New Song Heccar and Gaira The Methodist Colin Instructed Kew Gardens 321 324 326 329 334 338 342 344 348 349 350 The Advice ...
Page 321
... POEMS . ' SLY DICK . * Sharp was the frost , the wind was high And sparkling stars bedeckt the sky , From a copy in the handwriting of Sir Herbert Croft , in the volume of Chatterton's works purchased by Mr. Waldron at the sale of Sir ...
... POEMS . ' SLY DICK . * Sharp was the frost , the wind was high And sparkling stars bedeckt the sky , From a copy in the handwriting of Sir Herbert Croft , in the volume of Chatterton's works purchased by Mr. Waldron at the sale of Sir ...
Page 322
... poems , he is engaged in a style of com- position to which he was comparatively a stranger , and to which the bent of his mind and turn of his studies had not naturally inclined him . Although this argument seems to account , in a ...
... poems , he is engaged in a style of com- position to which he was comparatively a stranger , and to which the bent of his mind and turn of his studies had not naturally inclined him . Although this argument seems to account , in a ...
Page 325
... counterfeit Rowley , but such as prove , that the boy who wrote them could write better . In composing the ancient poems , all his attention had been exerted . It APOSTATE WILL . * In days of old , when A HYMN FOR CHRISTMAS DAY . 325.
... counterfeit Rowley , but such as prove , that the boy who wrote them could write better . In composing the ancient poems , all his attention had been exerted . It APOSTATE WILL . * In days of old , when A HYMN FOR CHRISTMAS DAY . 325.
Page 326
... poem is transcribed , says Sir Herbert Croft , from an old pocket- book in his mother's possession . It appears to be his first , perhaps his only copy of it ; and is evidently his hand writing . By the date he was eleven years and ...
... poem is transcribed , says Sir Herbert Croft , from an old pocket- book in his mother's possession . It appears to be his first , perhaps his only copy of it ; and is evidently his hand writing . By the date he was eleven years and ...
Contents
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Common terms and phrases
Acquitaine alderman Argent Argent and Azure Argent three BACCHUS bard Bend Bishop of Worcester breast Bristol Burgham Burgum Camden Catcott cease to sigh charms Chatterton Cheveron conscience copy CUPID Dean dear divine ELEGY Ermine ev'ry eyes fame fancy fate favour Fess fools Garter March genius give Godde grace Gules Gules three happy head heart honour Hoyland infamy John John of Worcester JUNO JUPITER Kew Gardens king Knight LADY TEMPEST LATITAT liberty Lord lordship Lyon Rampant lyre Magazine married mind minister ministry Miss muse never noble numbers o'er passion pleasure poem praise pride Recitative reign rise Rowley Sable sacred satire scene shew shine sing smile soft song soul spirit Spryte strain tell terton thee thine Thomas THOMAS CHATTERTON Thomas Rowley thou thro thunder trembling trifling Twitcher Vert virtue Whilst William Canynge ye Britons Zounds
Popular passages
Page 619 - Thy goodness love, thy justice fear! If in this bosom aught but Thee Encroaching sought a boundless sway, Omniscience could the danger see, And Mercy look the cause away. Then, why, my soul, dost thou complain ? Why drooping seek the dark recess ? Shake off the melancholy chain, For God created all to bless. But ah ! my breast is human still ; The rising sigh, the falling tear, My languid vitals' feeble rill, The sickness of my soul declare.
Page 606 - Youth bedew'd with liquid odours Courts thee on Roses in some pleasant Cave, Pyrrha for whom bind'st thou In wreaths thy golden Hair, Plain in thy neatness; O how oft shall he On Faith and changed Gods complain: and Seas Rough with black winds and storms Unwonted shall admire: Who now enjoyes thee credulous, all Gold, Who alwayes vacant, alwayes amiable Hopes thee; of flattering gales Unmindful!.
Page 463 - This is the most extraordinary young man that has encountered my knowledge. It is wonderful how the whelp has written such things.
Page 325 - Impelled by His eternal love, He left His palaces above To cheer our gloomy sky. How shall we celebrate the day, When God appeared in mortal clay, The mark of worldly scorn ; When the...
Page 617 - O God, whose thunder shakes the sky, Whose eye this atom globe surveys ; To Thee, my only rock, I fly, Thy mercy in thy justice praise. The mystic mazes of thy will, The shadows of celestial light, Are past the power of human skill — But what the Eternal acts is right...
Page 624 - To the memory of Thomas Chatterton. Reader, judge not if thou art a Christian, believe that he shall be judged by a superior Power. To that Power alone is he now answerable.
Page 395 - The inequality of Chatterton's various productions may be compared to the disproportions of the ungrown giant. His works had nothing of the definite neatness of that precocious talent which stops short in early maturity His thirst for knowledge was that of a being taught by instinct to lay up materials for the exercise of great and undeveloped powers. Even in his...
Page 396 - Mercury compleats his transient year, Glowing, refulgent, with reflected glare; Bright Venus occupies a wider way, The early harbinger of night and day ; More distant still our globe terraqueous turns, Nor chills intense, nor fiercely heated burns ; Around her rolls the lunar orb of light, Trailing her silver glories through the night: On the earth's orbit see the various signs, Mark where the sun, our year compleating, shine*. First the bright Ram his languid ray improves ; Next glaring wat'ry thro...
Page 718 - But I have engaged to live with a gentleman, the brother of a Lord, (a Scotch one indeed,) who is going to advance pretty deeply into the bookselling branches ; I shall have...
Page 723 - DEAR MOTHER, — I send you in the box " Six cups and saucers, with two basins, for my sister. If a china tea-pot and cream-pot is, in your opinion, necessary, I will send them ; but I am informed they are unfashionable, and that the red china, which you are provided with, is more in use. "A cargo of patterns for yourself, with a snuff-box, right French, and very curious in my opinion. " Two fans : — The silver one is more grave than the other, which would suit my sister best. But that I leave...