| Douglas Jerrold - English periodicals - 1848 - 578 pages
...in us. Butler's ludicrous simile upon the change of night into day, viz. : " The sun had long since in the lap Of Thetis taken out his nap, And like a...boil'd, the morn, From black to red began to turn." And Spenser's beautiful comparison on the same subject — " At last the golden oriental gate Of greatest... | |
| George John C. Duncan - 1848 - 418 pages
...daybreak, hastening to change his uniform for the more sober dress of his clerical profession, "' So, like a lobster boil'd, the morn From black to red began to turn.'" It certainly needed all the importance of the defensive service in which he was engaged, to blend without... | |
| George John C. Duncan - Clergy - 1848 - 346 pages
...daybreak, hastening to change his uniform for the more sober dress of his clerical profession, — " ' So, like a lobster boil'd, the morn From black to red began to turn.' " It certainly needed all the importance of the defensive service in which he was engaged, to blend... | |
| George Campbell - English language - 1849 - 472 pages
...Butler, among a thousand other instances, hath given us those which follow : " And now had Phoebus, m the lap Of Thetis, taken out his nap : And, like a lobster boil'd, the morn Froaa black to red began to turn."* Here the low allegorical style of the first couplet, and the simile... | |
| Robert Chambers - English literature - 1850 - 710 pages
...the short burlesque descriptions are inimitable. Fur example, of Morning — The sun had long since, gham in the Infernal Reijions."] [The dcflcrlptlon...Puke of Buckingham — the Huckfngbum, H muât be re Of Night— The sun grew low and left the skies, Put down, some write, by ladies' eyes , The moon pull'd... | |
| Allan Ramsay - 1851 - 192 pages
...the Scottish. Butler thus describes the morning, ludicrously, but wittily : " The sun had long since in the lap Of Thetis taken out his nap; And, like...boil'd, the morn From black to red began to turn." This pleases as an ingenious piece of wit. The whimsicamess of the comparison makes us smile ; but... | |
| Tucker Brooke, Matthias A. Shaaber - English literature - 1989 - 490 pages
...anti-poetic attitude towards his material. He loves to cheapen poetic "imagery": The sun had long since, in the lap Of Thetis, taken out his nap, And like...boil'd, the morn From black to red began to turn. Since Chaucer's day at least this sort of thing has been good fun, though the lobster is doubtless... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Criticism - 1920 - 388 pages
...means of some accidental coincidence; as 1.1 the well-known passage in Hudibras; The Sun had long since in the lap Of Thetis taken out his nap, And like a...boil'd, the morn From black to red began to turn. The Imagination modifies images, and gives unity to variety: it sees all things in one,t'//>iu nell'... | |
| Gay Wilson Allen, Harry Hayden Clark - Literary Criticism - 1962 - 676 pages
...compares the change of night into day, to the change of color in a boiled lobster: The sun had long since, in the lap Of Thetis, taken out his nap; And, like a lobster boiled, the morn From black to red, began to turn: When Hudibras, whom thoughts and aching 'Twixt sleeping... | |
| Physics - 1835 - 1076 pages
...turned to good account in the getting up of one of his ludicrous similes : " The sun had long since, in the lap Of Thetis, taken out his nap ; And, like a Uibster boiled, the morn From black to red began to turn." Hudibrat, part ii. cant. 2. Class 3. The... | |
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