Poems, Nide 2Clarendon Press, 1958 - 2104 sivua |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 71
Sivu 594
... Look'd like Translation , through the Firmament ; Or like the fiery Carr , on the third Errand sent . O happy Soul ! If thou canst view from high , Where thou art all Intelligence , all Eye , If looking up to God , or down to us , Thou ...
... Look'd like Translation , through the Firmament ; Or like the fiery Carr , on the third Errand sent . O happy Soul ! If thou canst view from high , Where thou art all Intelligence , all Eye , If looking up to God , or down to us , Thou ...
Sivu 685
... Look sharply out , our Senators to seize : Engross ' em wholly , by their Native Art , And fear no Rivals in their Bubbles heart : One drop of Poison in my Patron's Ear , One slight suggestion of a senseless fear , Infus'd with cunning ...
... Look sharply out , our Senators to seize : Engross ' em wholly , by their Native Art , And fear no Rivals in their Bubbles heart : One drop of Poison in my Patron's Ear , One slight suggestion of a senseless fear , Infus'd with cunning ...
Sivu 763
... look ill ; and thou look'st worse : I've done , says the Physician ; take your Course . The laughing Sot , like all unthinking Men , Baths and gets Drunk ; then Baths and Drinks again : His Throat half throtled with Corrupted Fleam ...
... look ill ; and thou look'st worse : I've done , says the Physician ; take your Course . The laughing Sot , like all unthinking Men , Baths and gets Drunk ; then Baths and Drinks again : His Throat half throtled with Corrupted Fleam ...
Sisältö
The Hind and the Panther Text from the first edition 1687 A collated with the second | 499 |
A SONG FOR ST CECILIAS DAY 1687 | 538 |
The Prologue and Epilogue to The History of Bacon in Virginia | 551 |
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Æneid amongst Ancient Andronicus Aristophanes Augustus Augustus Cæsar AULUS PERSIUS FLACCUS Author bear Beauties betwixt Cæsar call'd Casaubon Codrus cou'd Crimes Dacier dare Decemviri e're Earth Ennius Ev'n ev'ry Eyes Face fair Fame Fate Father fear foes Fool forc'd Friend give Gods Grace Grecians Greek Ground hand happy hast Head Heav'n Heroique Homer Honour Horace imitated Jove Juvenal kind King living Livius Andronicus Lord Lordship Love Lucilius mean Menippus Mind MOPSUS Muse Name Nature never Night Noble Numbers Nymph o're observ'd Pacuvius pains Persius plain Play pleas'd Pleasure Poem Poet Poetry Poor Pow'r Praise Pray'r Prologue Publick Quintilian rais'd receiv'd rest rise Roman Rome Sacred Satire Saturn Satyr Sejanus shew shou'd sing Slave Song Soul Stoick thee things thou thought try'd turn'd us'd Varro Verse Vices Virgil Virtue Wife Words wou'd write Youth ΙΟ