Bell's Edition, 第 63~64 巻J. Bell, 1782 |
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... charm the crowded groves , And Addifon thy tuneful fong approves . Soft harmony and manly vigour join GROVE . To form the beauties of each fprightly line , For ev'ry grace of ev'ry Mufe is thine . } BRITANNICUS , VOL..V .. EDINBURG : AT ...
... charm the crowded groves , And Addifon thy tuneful fong approves . Soft harmony and manly vigour join GROVE . To form the beauties of each fprightly line , For ev'ry grace of ev'ry Mufe is thine . } BRITANNICUS , VOL..V .. EDINBURG : AT ...
vii ページ
... charms of wit have been added to debauchery , and the temptation heightened where Nature needs the strongest reftraints . With fweetnefs of found and delicacies of expreflion they have given a relish to blafphemies of the harfheft kind ...
... charms of wit have been added to debauchery , and the temptation heightened where Nature needs the strongest reftraints . With fweetnefs of found and delicacies of expreflion they have given a relish to blafphemies of the harfheft kind ...
xxviii ページ
... charm- ed with every page of it . The length of his periods , and fometimes of his parentheses , runs me out of breath : fome of his numbers feem too harsh and un- eafy . I could never believe that roughness and obfcu- rity added any ...
... charm- ed with every page of it . The length of his periods , and fometimes of his parentheses , runs me out of breath : fome of his numbers feem too harsh and un- eafy . I could never believe that roughness and obfcu- rity added any ...
xxix ページ
... charm a fickly fancy by their very awkwardness ; fo a distempered appetite will chew coals and fand and pronounce it guftful . In the Pindaricks I have generally conformed my lines to the shorter size of the Ancients , and avoided to ...
... charm a fickly fancy by their very awkwardness ; fo a distempered appetite will chew coals and fand and pronounce it guftful . In the Pindaricks I have generally conformed my lines to the shorter size of the Ancients , and avoided to ...
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... charms . III . No gay Alexis in the grove Shall be my future theme ; I burn with an immortal love , And fing a purer flame . IV . Seraphick heights I seem to gain And facred transports feel While Watts ! to thy celeftial ftrain Surpris ...
... charms . III . No gay Alexis in the grove Shall be my future theme ; I burn with an immortal love , And fing a purer flame . IV . Seraphick heights I seem to gain And facred transports feel While Watts ! to thy celeftial ftrain Surpris ...
多く使われている語句
aftra angels Behold beneath blefs blefs'd blifs breaſt breath bright celeftial charms command darkneſs dear death defcending defign defire delight divine duft dwell earth eternal ev'ry everlaſting eyes facred faints fair falute fame fcenes feas fenfe fhade fhall fhining fhould fight filence fing fkies flame fleſh fmiles fome fong forrows foul fov'reign ftand ftill ftreams ftrong fuch fweet fwell glory grace happy heart heav'n heav'nly honours immortal ISAAC WATTS Jefus joys juft King light Lord mind mortal moſt mourn Mufe Muſe muſt numbers o'er paffions pain pleaſe pleaſure pow'rs praiſe purſue reaſon reft reigns rife roll round rove ſcenes ſhall ſhe ſhine ſkies ſky ſmile ſong ſpeak ſpheres ſpirit ſpread ſprings ſtand ſtars ſtate ſtill ſtrain ſweet tears terrour thee thefe theſe thine things thofe thoſe thou thoughts thouſand thro throne thunder tongue whofe whoſe wings wondrous
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103 ページ - Here's love and grief beyond degree, The Lord of glory dies for men ! But lo ! what sudden joys we see ! Jesus the dead revives again ! 4 The rising God forsakes the tomb ! Up to his Father's court he flies ; Cherubic legions guard him home, And shout him welcome to the skies.
128 ページ - And shed a sweet perfume. Here I put off the chains of death My soul too long has worn : Friends, I forbid one groaning breath, Or tear to wet my urn ; Raphael, behold me all...
109 ページ - Now let me mount and join their song, And be an angel too ; My heart, my hand, my ear, my tongue — Here's joyful work for you.
xxxi ページ - The best of them sinks below the idea which I form of a divine or moral ode. He that deals in the mysteries of Heaven, or of the Muses, should be a genius of no vulgar mould...
96 ページ - And thine, my Mitio, (the fair saint replies.) Life, death, the world below, and worlds on high, And place, and time, are ours; and things to come, And past, and present, for our interest stands Firm in our mystic head, the title sure.
xxvii ページ - Poland, would need no excuse, did they but rise to the beauty of the original. I have often taken the freedom to add ten or twenty lines, or to leave out as many, that I might suit my song more to my own design, or because I saw it impossible to present the force, the fineness, and the fire of his expression in our language.
106 ページ - Thoughts like old vultures, prey upon their heart-strings, And the smart twinges, when the eye beholds the Lofty Judge frowning, and a flood of vengeance Rolling afore Him.
xxix ページ - I ever affect archaisms, exoticisms, and a quaint uncouthness of speech, in order to become perfectly Miltonian. It is my opinion that blank verse may be written with all due elevation of thought in a modern...
51 ページ - Chained to His throne a volume lies, With all the fates of men; With every angel's form and size, Drawn by th
xvii ページ - Boileau's objection, from other poets of his own country. What a noble use have Racine and Corneille made of Christian subjects, in some of their best tragedies ! What a variety of divine scenes are displayed, and pious passions awakened in those poems. The martyrdom of Polyeucte, how doth it reign over our love and pity, and at the same time animate our zeal and devotion...