The Art of English Poetry: Containing. Rules for making verses. A collection of the most natural, agreeable, and sublime thoughts ... that are to be found in the best English poets. A dictionary of rhymes. I.. II.. III.Hitch and Hawes, 1762 - English language |
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Page 16
... Stand , To rush from high on his unequal Foe , Like a Lion , Dryd . Virg Who long has reign'd the Terror of the Woods , And dar'd the boldeft Huntsmen to the Combat ; ' Till caught at length within fome hidden Snare , With foaming Jaws ...
... Stand , To rush from high on his unequal Foe , Like a Lion , Dryd . Virg Who long has reign'd the Terror of the Woods , And dar'd the boldeft Huntsmen to the Combat ; ' Till caught at length within fome hidden Snare , With foaming Jaws ...
Page 19
... stands still : What we refuse to him , to Death we give ; ( Bride And then , then only , when we love , we live . Cong . Mourn . Love's an heroick Paffion , which can find No Room in any bafe degen'rate Mind : It kindles all the Soul ...
... stands still : What we refuse to him , to Death we give ; ( Bride And then , then only , when we love , we live . Cong . Mourn . Love's an heroick Paffion , which can find No Room in any bafe degen'rate Mind : It kindles all the Soul ...
Page 26
... Stand Upon a Widow's Jointure - Land ; Drew home his Bow , and , aiming right , Let fly an Arrow at the Knight : The Shaft against a Rib did glance , And gaul'd him in the Purtenance . O Love ! O curfed Boy ! Hud Where art thou that ...
... Stand Upon a Widow's Jointure - Land ; Drew home his Bow , and , aiming right , Let fly an Arrow at the Knight : The Shaft against a Rib did glance , And gaul'd him in the Purtenance . O Love ! O curfed Boy ! Hud Where art thou that ...
Page 41
... stands , Contemplating his former Feet and Hands ; And Milo - like , his flacken'd Sinews fees , And wither'd Arms , once fit to cope with Hercules ; Unable now to shake , much lefs to tear the Trees . Thus even our Bodies daily Change ...
... stands , Contemplating his former Feet and Hands ; And Milo - like , his flacken'd Sinews fees , And wither'd Arms , once fit to cope with Hercules ; Unable now to shake , much lefs to tear the Trees . Thus even our Bodies daily Change ...
Page 46
... stand , when , put to double Pain , He muft a weaker than himself sustain ? Each might have ftood perhaps , but each alone ; Two Wrestlers help to pull each other down . Not that my Verfe would blemish all the Fair ; But yet , if fome ...
... stand , when , put to double Pain , He muft a weaker than himself sustain ? Each might have ftood perhaps , but each alone ; Two Wrestlers help to pull each other down . Not that my Verfe would blemish all the Fair ; But yet , if fome ...
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Common terms and phrases
Arms bafe becauſe Billows Blac Blood Breaft Breath caft Cleom Clouds Courſe Cowl Death defcends Defire Don Seb Dryd Dryd.Virg Earth ev'n ev'ry Eyes fafe falute fame Fate Fear feems fhall fhining fhould filent fing Fire firft firſt flain Flame Flood Flow'rs foft fome form'd fpread ftand ftill fuch fweet Gerunds Gods Ground Guife Head Heart Heav'n himſelf itſelf Jove laft laſt Lee Alex lefs Light Love Lyre mighty Milt Mufick muſt Night Numbers o'er Oedip Orph Ovid Paffion Pain Perfon Plain pleaſe Pleaſure Pope Hom Pow'r Pref Prefent Rage Reafon reft Rhymes rife roar Rofe Rowe Fair Pen Senfe Shak ſhake ſhe Shore Show'rs Skies Soul ſtands Stars ſtill Storm Tears Tempeft thee thefe theſe thofe thoſe thou thro Thunder ticiples trembling Verbs Verfe vex'd Virg Waves whofe Wife Winds worfe
Popular passages
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Page 179 - CHLORIS ! yourself you so excel, When you vouchsafe to breathe my thought, That, like a spirit, with this spell Of my own teaching, I am caught, That eagle's fate and mine are one, Which, on the shaft that made him die, Espied a feather of his own, Wherewith he wont to soar so high. Had Echo, with so sweet a grace, Narcissus' loud complaints return'd, Not for reflection of his face, But of his voice, the boy had burn'd.
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Page 239 - Nor was his name unheard or unadored In ancient Greece ; and in Ausonian land Men called him Mulciber ; and how he fell From heaven, they fabled, thrown by angry Jove Sheer o'er the crystal battlements : from morn To noon he fell, from noon to dewy eve, A summer's day ; and with the setting sun Dropt from the zenith like a falling star...