The works of the English poets. With prefaces, biographical and critical, by S. Johnson, Volume 521790 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 62
Page 12
... train Fill'd up proud Sarum's wide - extended plain ! Then , when he stoop'd from awful majesty , Put on the man , and laid the fovereign by ; When the glad nations faw their king appear ; Begirt with armies , and the pride of war ...
... train Fill'd up proud Sarum's wide - extended plain ! Then , when he stoop'd from awful majesty , Put on the man , and laid the fovereign by ; When the glad nations faw their king appear ; Begirt with armies , and the pride of war ...
Page 40
... train rolls back , and floats along the sea , Here fame reports th ' unbody'd shades to go Through this wide paffage to the realins below . From hence the peafants ( as th ' Arcadians tell ) Hear all the cries , and groans , and din of ...
... train rolls back , and floats along the sea , Here fame reports th ' unbody'd shades to go Through this wide paffage to the realins below . From hence the peafants ( as th ' Arcadians tell ) Hear all the cries , and groans , and din of ...
Page 42
... train , Exult and revel on the Thracian plain ; With milk their bloody banquets they allay , Or from the lion rend his panting prey ; On fome abandon'd favage fiercely fly , Seize , tear , devour , and think it luxury . But if the ...
... train , Exult and revel on the Thracian plain ; With milk their bloody banquets they allay , Or from the lion rend his panting prey ; On fome abandon'd favage fiercely fly , Seize , tear , devour , and think it luxury . But if the ...
Page 68
... train , Reluctant to the sea . Amid the scene the temple floats , With its reflected towers , Gilds all the furface of the flood , And dances to the fhores . With wonder fee what mighty power Our facred Sion chears , Lo ! there amidst ...
... train , Reluctant to the sea . Amid the scene the temple floats , With its reflected towers , Gilds all the furface of the flood , And dances to the fhores . With wonder fee what mighty power Our facred Sion chears , Lo ! there amidst ...
Page 78
... Train'd to blafpheme , and eloquent in guilt : Their hands are impious , and their deeds profane , They plead their boasted innocence in vain . Thy name shall dwell for ever on my tongue , And guide the facred numbers of my song ; To ...
... Train'd to blafpheme , and eloquent in guilt : Their hands are impious , and their deeds profane , They plead their boasted innocence in vain . Thy name shall dwell for ever on my tongue , And guide the facred numbers of my song ; To ...
Common terms and phrases
Æneas Æneid arms Bard bleft breaſt Calchas CHRISTOPHER PITT coaft courſe crowd deep Dido dire diſtant divine dreadful eyes facred fafe fair fame fate fecret fhade fhall fhines fhore fide fierce fight filence fing fire firft firſt fkies flain flames fleep flood fome fong foul friends ftill ftreams fuch fwelling fword glorious gods Grecian Greece heaven Helenus hero himſelf Iliad Ilion immortal infpire Jove king labours laſt Latian Latium loft Lord meaſures mighty Mufe Muſe muſt numbers o'er Phoebus Phrygian pleaſe pleaſure poet pow'rs praiſe Priam proud purſue queen rage rais'd raiſe realms rife riſe roar round ſcene ſea ſee ſhades ſhall ſhe ſhore ſhould ſkies ſky ſpoke ſpread ſtand ſtate ſtill tempeft thee thefe theſe thofe thoſe thou thouſand tide toils tow'rs train tranſport trembling Trojan Troy Ulyffes vaft vaſt whofe Whoſe wretch youth
Popular passages
Page 67 - His hand protefts us in the fight, And guards us from our woes. Then, be the earth's unwieldy frame From its foundations hurl'd, We may, unmov'd with fear, enjoy The ruins of the world. What though the folid rocks be rent, In tempefts whirl'd away ? What though the hills...
Page 75 - I lay, and ripening to my birth ; Yet, Lord, thy out-ftretch'd arm preferv'd me there ; Before I mov'd to entity, and trod The verge of being. To thy hallow'd name I'll pay due honours : for thy mighty hand Built this corporeal fabrick, when it laid The ground-work of exiltence.
Page 104 - You praife low-living, but you live at large. Perhaps you fcarce believe the rules you teach, Or find it hard to praftife what you preach. Scarce have you paid one idle journey down, But, without bufinefs, you're again in town. If none invite you, fir, abroad to roam, Then — Lord, what pleafure 'tis to read at home^ And fip your two half-pints, with great delight, Of beer at noon, and muddled port at night.
Page 133 - ... Let the grave judges too the glafs forbear, Who never fing and dance but once a year. This truth once known, our poets take the hint, Get drunk or mad, and then get into print : To raife their flames indulge the mellow fit, And lofe their fenfes in the fearch of wit : * Late r.illn.n of London. And And when with claret fir'd they take the pen, Swear they can write, becaufe they drink, like Ben.
Page 214 - I would not blufh, but triumph in the theft. Nor on the Antients for the whole rely, The whole is more than all their works fupply ; Some things your own invention muft explore, Some virgin images untouch'd before. New terms no laws forbid us to induce, To coin a word, and...
Page 136 - Warm blufhes lend a beauty to their face, For virtue's comely tints their cheeks adorn ; Thus o'er the diftant hillocks you may trace The purple beamings of the infant morn : Sweet are our blooming maids — the fweeteft creatures born. IV. None but their...
Page 177 - A cold dull order bravely they forfake ; Fixt and refolv'd the winding way to take, They nobly deviate from the beaten track. The poet marks th...
Page 215 - How many words from rich Mycenae come, Of Greek extraftion, in the drefs of Rome ? That live with ours, our rights and freedom claim, Their nature different, but their looks the fame ; Through Latium's realms, in Latium's garb they go, At once her ftrangers, and her natives too. Long has her poverty been fled, and long With native riches has me grac'd her tongue.
Page 232 - Carthaginians. ./Eneas, going out to discover the country, meets his mother in the shape of a huntress, who conveys him in a cloud to Carthage, where he sees his friends whom he thought lost, and receives a kind entertainment from the queen. Dido- by a device of Venus, begins to have a passion for him, and, after some discourse with him, desires the history of his adventures since the siege of Troy, which is the subject of the two following books.
Page 118 - Coachmen will criticife your ftyle, nay further. Porters will bring it in for wilful murther : The dregs of the canaille will look afkew To hear the language of the town from you ; Nay, my...