A select collection of poems: with notes [by J. Nichols]. |
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Page 2
... brings ; By him the herd does graze ; by him the herdsman fings . I MELIB OE U S. envy not , but I admire your fate , Which thus exempts you from our wretched state . Look on my goats that browze , my kids that play , Driven hence ...
... brings ; By him the herd does graze ; by him the herdsman fings . I MELIB OE U S. envy not , but I admire your fate , Which thus exempts you from our wretched state . Look on my goats that browze , my kids that play , Driven hence ...
Page 3
... brings in Melibus , viz . his Mantuan neigh- bours , pathetically relating their own deplorable condition , and at the fame time magnifying the felicity of Tityrus . This his exemption from the common calamity of his coun- trymen ...
... brings in Melibus , viz . his Mantuan neigh- bours , pathetically relating their own deplorable condition , and at the fame time magnifying the felicity of Tityrus . This his exemption from the common calamity of his coun- trymen ...
Page 9
... bring , Nor am I fo deform'd ; for t'other day , When all the dreadful ftorm was blown away , As on the cliffs above the fea I , ftood , I view'd my image in the fea - green flood ; And if I look as handsome all the year , To vie with ...
... bring , Nor am I fo deform'd ; for t'other day , When all the dreadful ftorm was blown away , As on the cliffs above the fea I , ftood , I view'd my image in the fea - green flood ; And if I look as handsome all the year , To vie with ...
Page 10
... brings home the plough , The fhades increasing as the fun goes low . Bleft fields reljev'd by night's approach so soon , Love has no night ! ' tis always raging noon ! Ah Corydon ! what frenzy fills thy breast ? Thy vineyard lies half ...
... brings home the plough , The fhades increasing as the fun goes low . Bleft fields reljev'd by night's approach so soon , Love has no night ! ' tis always raging noon ! Ah Corydon ! what frenzy fills thy breast ? Thy vineyard lies half ...
Page 10
... brings their meat , their onions , and their leeks : And whilst I trace thy steps , in every tree And every bush , poor infects figh with me :: Ah ! had it not been better to have borne The peevish Amaryllis ' frown and fcorn , Or elfe ...
... brings their meat , their onions , and their leeks : And whilst I trace thy steps , in every tree And every bush , poor infects figh with me :: Ah ! had it not been better to have borne The peevish Amaryllis ' frown and fcorn , Or elfe ...
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Common terms and phrases
Amyntas arms beauty beſt bleft boaſt breaſt cauſe Ceyx charms Corydon Cyrene dear death defign defires defpair delight earth ECLOGUE Ev'n eyes facred fafe fair fame fate fatire fear feas fecond feeks feem feen fenfe fhades fhall fhepherd fhew fhould fighs fight filent fince fing fire firft firſt flame foft fome fongs foul fpread fpring ftill fuch fure fwain fweet fwelling Gods greateſt grief groves Guife heart Heaven himſelf juft juſt laft laſt lefs live loft lov'd lover MENAL CAS moft moſt mourn Mufe muft Muſe muſt ne'er numbers nymphs o'er Orinda Ovid paffion pain pleafing pleas'd pleaſe pleaſure poems poet praiſe prefent Procris purſue rage raiſe reft rife ſhall ſhe ſtill ſtreams ſweet tears thee thefe theſe thine thofe thoſe thou thouſand TIBULLUS tuneful Tyrian purple verfe verſe whofe youth
Popular passages
Page 55 - AH, how sweet it is to love! Ah, how gay is young Desire ! And what pleasing pains we prove When we first approach Love's fire ! Pains of love be sweeter far Than all other pleasures are. Sighs which are from lovers blown Do but gently heave the heart: E'en the tears they shed alone Cure, like trickling balm, their smart.
Page 55 - When passion is decay'd? We lov'd, and we lov'd, as long as we could, Till our love was lov'd out in us both; But our marriage is dead, when the pleasure is fled: 'Twas pleasure first made it an oath.
Page 213 - ONLY tell her that I love: Leave the rest to her and Fate: Some kind planet from above May perhaps her pity move: Lovers on their stars must wait. — Only tell her that I love! Why, O why should I despair!
Page 115 - A sigh or tear, perhaps, she'll give, But love on pity cannot live. Tell her that hearts for hearts were made, And love with love is only paid.
Page 55 - Twas Pleasure first made it an Oath. If I have Pleasures for a Friend, And farther love in store, What wrong has he whose joys did end, And who cou'd give no more?
Page 218 - Are not Boileau and Corneille paid For panegyric writing? They know how heroes may be made, Without the help of fighting. When foes too...
Page 116 - Court-Prospect," in which many of the principal nobility are very handsomely complimented, is called by Jacob " an excellent piece ;" and of his other poems he adds, " that they are all remarkable for the purity of their diction, and the harmony of their numbers.
Page 214 - Christian Hero." On the accession of queen Anne, he was made a lieutenant-general of the forces in Holland.
Page 115 - A cupola was defigned 30 feet higher than the roof, which would have been feen at fea; and a ftreet was intended leading from the Weft end of the cathedral to the centre of the front. The length of the whole is 328 feet. A park was alfo...
Page 118 - I now begin to experience how much the mind may be influenced by the body. My Muse is confined, at present, to a weak and sickly tenement; and the winter season will go near to overbear her, together with her household. There are storms and tempests to beat her down, or frosts to...