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 |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-5 van 43
Pagina 35
... Hours of late as long as Days endure , And very Minutes Hours are grown . Or of 8 and 6 in the like manner ; as , Then afk not Bodies doom'd to die , Cowh To what Abode they go : Since Knowledge is but Sorrow's Spy , ' Tis better not to ...
... Hours of late as long as Days endure , And very Minutes Hours are grown . Or of 8 and 6 in the like manner ; as , Then afk not Bodies doom'd to die , Cowh To what Abode they go : Since Knowledge is but Sorrow's Spy , ' Tis better not to ...
Pagina 40
... Hours : Time what we forbear devours . Wall . Which is only a Stanza of 4 Verfes in alternate Rhyme , to which a 5th Verfe is added , that rhymes to the 2d and 4th . See also an Inftance of a Stanza of 5 Verfes , where the Rhymes are ...
... Hours : Time what we forbear devours . Wall . Which is only a Stanza of 4 Verfes in alternate Rhyme , to which a 5th Verfe is added , that rhymes to the 2d and 4th . See also an Inftance of a Stanza of 5 Verfes , where the Rhymes are ...
Pagina 45
... Hour of Prime ! Thou Sun ! of this great World both Eye and Soul , Acknowledge him thy Creator , found his Praife In thy eternal Courfe , both when thou climb'ft , And when high Noon haft gain'd , and when thou fall'ft . • Moon ! that ...
... Hour of Prime ! Thou Sun ! of this great World both Eye and Soul , Acknowledge him thy Creator , found his Praife In thy eternal Courfe , both when thou climb'ft , And when high Noon haft gain'd , and when thou fall'ft . • Moon ! that ...
Pagina 49
... Hours for Months , and Days for Years ; And every little Abfence is an Age . The tedious Hours move heavily away , And each long Minute feems a lazy Day . Dryd . Amphit . Otw . Cai . Mar. D For For thee the bubbling Springs appear'd to ...
... Hours for Months , and Days for Years ; And every little Abfence is an Age . The tedious Hours move heavily away , And each long Minute feems a lazy Day . Dryd . Amphit . Otw . Cai . Mar. D For For thee the bubbling Springs appear'd to ...
Pagina 50
... Hour is worth wholeYears of Pain . Row . I charge thee loiter not , but hafte to bless me ; Think with what eager ... Hours , you meafure Time for me in vain , Till you bring back Leonidas again : Be fwifter now ; and , to redeem that ...
... Hour is worth wholeYears of Pain . Row . I charge thee loiter not , but hafte to bless me ; Think with what eager ... Hours , you meafure Time for me in vain , Till you bring back Leonidas again : Be fwifter now ; and , to redeem that ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Accent Æneid Arms Beauty Blac Blood Breaft caft Clouds compos'd confift Confonant Cowl Curfe Dart Death defcends Defire Diphthong dreadful Dryd Dryd.Virg Earth Elifion ev'n ev'ry Eyes facred fafe faid fame Fate Fear feem feem'd fhall fhining fhould filent Fire firft firſt flain Flames flies Flow'rs foft fome fometimes Fools fpread ftand ftill fuch fure fwell Gerund Ground Guife Heart Heav'n Heroick himſelf Honour juft laft fave laſt lefs Light lofe loft Love Meaſure Milt moft muft muſt Night Number of Syllables o'er obferve Oedip Orph Ovid Paffion Paufe Pauſe Pleaſure Poems Poets Pope Hom Pow'r Rage reft Rhyme rifing rofe Senfe Shak ſhakes ſhall ſhe Skies Soul Stanzas ſtill Tempeft thee thefe theſe thofe thoſe thou thouſand thro us'd vaft Verfes Verſes Virg Vowel Wall whofe Winds Wings Word Wound
Populaire passages
Pagina 139 - know not where, To lie in cold Obftruftion, and to rot; This fenfible warm Motion to become A kneaded Clod ; and the delighted Spirit To bathe in fiery Floods, or to refide In thrilling Regions of thick-ribbed Ice : To be imprifon'd in the viewlefs Winds, Or blown with reftlefs Violence about The pendant World; or to be
Pagina 251 - Summer in a Sea of Glory, But far beyond my Depth. My high-blown Pride At length broke under me, and now has left me, Weary and old with Service, to the Mercy Of a rude Stream that muft for ever hide me.
Pagina 124 - In the Sun's Orb, made porous to receive, And drink the liquid Light; firm to retain Her gather'd Beams : Great Palace now of Light; Hither, as to their Fountain, other Stars Repairing, in their Golden Urns draw Light; And hence the Morning Planet gilds her Horns.
Pagina 188 - What Tributaries follow him to Rome, To grace in captive Bands his Chariot-Wheels ! Have you climb'd up to Walls and Battlements, To Towers and Windows, yea to Chimney-Tops, Your Infants in your Arms, and there have fate The live-long Day with patient
Pagina 165 - and when h'as done^ The Moon and Stars drink up the Sun: They drink and dance by their own Light, They drink and revel all the Night. Nothing in Nature's fober found, But an eternal Health goes round. Fill up the Bowl then, fill it high : Fill all the Glafles there; for why Should ev'ry
Pagina 129 - 1 had rather be a Toad, And live upon the Vapour of a Dungeon, Than keep a Corner in the Thing I love For others Ufes, Yet 'tis the Plague of Great Ones : Prerogativ'd are they lefs than the Bafe ; . 'Tis Deftiny
Pagina 247 - this has done. My Joy, my Grief, my Hope, my Love, Did all within this Circle move. A narrow Compafs! And yet there Dwelt all that's Good, and all that's Fair. Give me but what this Ribband bound;
Pagina 295 - deep the Groans : Defpair Tended the Sick, bufy from Couch to Couch ; And over them triumphant Death his Dart Shook, but delay'd to ftrike, tho' oft invok'd With Vows, as their chief Good and final Hope. Milt. Immediately a Place
Pagina 41 - tell, ye Sons of Light, Angels ! for you behold him, and with Songs, And Choral Symphonies, Day without Night, Circle his Throne rejoicing, you in Heaven. On Earth, join all ye Creatures, to extol
Pagina 265 - and in the Jaws of Hell, Revengeful Cares, and fullen Sorrows dwell; And pale Difeafes, and repining Age, Want, Fear, and Famine's unrefifted Rage : Here Toils, and Death, and Death's Half-brother Sleep, Forms terrible to view, their Gentry keep ; With anxious Pleafures of a guilty Mind, Deep Frauds before, and open Force behind