Works: In English Verse, Volume 11767 |
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Page 2
... fing A fhady Grove and purling Spring , Where the light Choir of Nymphs advance , With 7 Satyrs , in the mazy Dance . But if Macenas place my Name Among the Bards of Lyric Fame , Above the Crowd I then fhall rife , And touch Above ODES ...
... fing A fhady Grove and purling Spring , Where the light Choir of Nymphs advance , With 7 Satyrs , in the mazy Dance . But if Macenas place my Name Among the Bards of Lyric Fame , Above the Crowd I then fhall rife , And touch Above ODES ...
Page 10
... fing ; I try to fing , dear Joe , to you , And pay the Debt to Friendship due ; O'erjoy'd if you approve my Lays , And careless of all other Praife . ODE II . To AUGUSTUS CASA r . By Mr. J. DUNCOMBE * . TOO long with Storms of Hail and ...
... fing ; I try to fing , dear Joe , to you , And pay the Debt to Friendship due ; O'erjoy'd if you approve my Lays , And careless of all other Praife . ODE II . To AUGUSTUS CASA r . By Mr. J. DUNCOMBE * . TOO long with Storms of Hail and ...
Page 30
... fings his Woe , Wilt thou be mov'd to Pity , or bestow An Alms ? What's more prepofterous than to fee A merry Beggar ? Mirth in Mifery ? DRYDEN . Others used to dedicate and hang up thefe Pictures in the Temple of the God , whofe ...
... fings his Woe , Wilt thou be mov'd to Pity , or bestow An Alms ? What's more prepofterous than to fee A merry Beggar ? Mirth in Mifery ? DRYDEN . Others used to dedicate and hang up thefe Pictures in the Temple of the God , whofe ...
Page 32
... Cambridge . A I. 1 Varius , rais'd on Homer's Wing , Your Valour and Succefs demand , Our gallant Veterans to fing , Victorious under You by Sea and Land . II . Such II . Such Deeds , 2 Agrippa , to relate 32 ODES of HORACE ,
... Cambridge . A I. 1 Varius , rais'd on Homer's Wing , Your Valour and Succefs demand , Our gallant Veterans to fing , Victorious under You by Sea and Land . II . Such II . Such Deeds , 2 Agrippa , to relate 32 ODES of HORACE ,
Page 49
... fing , Envoy of Jove to Earth and Hell ; The Parent of the vocal String , And fly in Wantonness of Heart to steal . Unless his Herd he would restore , Severely menacing the 2 Child , He dearly fhould the Theft deplore ; Strip'd of his ...
... fing , Envoy of Jove to Earth and Hell ; The Parent of the vocal String , And fly in Wantonness of Heart to steal . Unless his Herd he would restore , Severely menacing the 2 Child , He dearly fhould the Theft deplore ; Strip'd of his ...
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Common terms and phrases
Achilles addreffed Æneid againſt alfo alludes alſo ancient Antony Apollo Archytas Arms Auguftus Bacchus beautiful becauſe Breath Cæfar Cafar called Campania Caufe Charms DACIER Death defcended defcribed Defign Defire dread DRYDEN DUNCOMBE Epiftle facred fafe faid fame Fate Faunus fays Fear fecond feems fent feveral fhall fhine fhould fince fing firft firſt flain foft fome foon fpeaks Friend ftill fuch fuppofed Gaul Gelonos Gods Grace Heaven himſelf Honour Horace Jove juft Jupiter King laſt loft Love Lyre Macenas Medes moſt Mufe muft muſt NOTE o'er Occafion ODE Imitated ODE ODE Ovid Paffage pafs Parthians Perfon Plain Pleaſure Plutarch Poet Praiſe prefent purſue Pyrrhus raiſe Reafon rife Romans Rome Sanadon Sappho ſays ſeems Senfe Sextus Pompey ſhall Shore ſtill Suetonius Thee thefe theſe third Book thofe thoſe thou Thrace Tibur tranflated Ulyffes uſed Venus Verfe Virgil whofe Winds Wine Youth
Popular passages
Page 206 - Cacus the son of Vulcan, who breathed out nothing but flame. I do not know by the character that is given of her works, whether it is not for the benefit...
Page 19 - Could thro' the ranks of ruin go, With storms above, and rocks below ! In vain did Nature's wise command Divide the waters from the land, If daring ships and men prophane Invade th' inviolable main ; Th' eternal fences over-leap, And pass at will the boundless deep.
Page 46 - With well-heap'd logs dissolve the cold, And feed the genial hearth with fires; Produce the wine, that makes us bold, And sprightly wit and love inspires : For what hereafter shall betide, God, if 'tis worth his care, provide.
Page 206 - One may see by what is left of them that she followed nature in all her thoughts, without descending to those little points, conceits, and turns of wit with which many of our modern lyrics are so miserably infected.
Page 19 - Nor Hyades portending rain, Nor all the tyrants of the main. What form of death could him affright, Who...
Page 109 - I, who these mysterious truths declare, Was once Euphorbus in the Trojan war; My name, and lineage I remember well, And how in fight by Sparta's king I fell. In Argive Juno's fane I late beheld My buckler hung on high, and own'd my former shield.
Page 247 - Cowper's merit, not my own. And when the tomb my duft mall hide, Stripp'd of a mortal's little pride, Vain pomp be fpar'd, and every tear ; Let but...
Page 20 - Ambitious man inur'd to pain; The more confin'd, the more he tries, And at forbidden quarry flies. Thus bold Prometheus did...
Page 41 - LET others in exalted lays The lofty dome of Hopetoun praise, Or where of old, in lonely cell, The musing druid wont to dwell: Or with the sacred sisters roam, Near holy Melrose...
Page 126 - Reliev'd his wave-beat ship from sea, Or camp'd upon the plain, The joys of wine, and Muses young, Soft Beauty, and her page he sung, That still to her adheres : Margaret, author of his sighs, Adorn'd with comely coal-black eyes, And comely coal-black hairs.