PoemsMoxon, 1860 - 306 pages |
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Page iii
... thought ; To Virtue wake the pulses of the heart , And bid the tear of emulation start ! Oh could it still , thro ' each succeeding year , My life , my manners , and my name endear ; And , when the poet sleeps in silent dust , Still ...
... thought ; To Virtue wake the pulses of the heart , And bid the tear of emulation start ! Oh could it still , thro ' each succeeding year , My life , my manners , and my name endear ; And , when the poet sleeps in silent dust , Still ...
Page vii
... thoughts . We wish also to be told the manner in which he wrote them , whether carefully , or hastily ; whether by the help of observation in the world , or of study in books . And we further wish to be told the particulars of his ...
... thoughts . We wish also to be told the manner in which he wrote them , whether carefully , or hastily ; whether by the help of observation in the world , or of study in books . And we further wish to be told the particulars of his ...
Page xv
... thought the American Colonies had not been treated with justice , when the nation was rushing into the American war ... thoughts which we again meet with in the early writings of the pupil . While living as a boy at Newington Green ...
... thought the American Colonies had not been treated with justice , when the nation was rushing into the American war ... thoughts which we again meet with in the early writings of the pupil . While living as a boy at Newington Green ...
Page xviii
... thoughts upon paper , and making up his mind to offer them to a publisher . In the beginning of 1781 , when eighteen years old , in admi- ration of Johnson's Rambler , he sent a short literary essay to the Gentleman's Magazine . It was ...
... thoughts upon paper , and making up his mind to offer them to a publisher . In the beginning of 1781 , when eighteen years old , in admi- ration of Johnson's Rambler , he sent a short literary essay to the Gentleman's Magazine . It was ...
Page xxii
... thought and feeling fled , ' A mingled gleam of hope and triumph shed ; ' What to thy soul its glad assurance gave , ' Its hope in death , its triumph o'er the grave ? ' The sweet Remembrance of unblemished youth , ' The still inspiring ...
... thought and feeling fled , ' A mingled gleam of hope and triumph shed ; ' What to thy soul its glad assurance gave , ' Its hope in death , its triumph o'er the grave ? ' The sweet Remembrance of unblemished youth , ' The still inspiring ...
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Common terms and phrases
admiration ancient beautiful bids blessed blest breathe bright called CANTO CHARLES JAMES Fox charm Cicero Columbus dark death delight dream Euripides eyes father fear feelings Finden fled flowers fond gaze Gilbert Wakefield glows Goodall grey grove hail hand hear heart Heaven Hence Herodotus Hist hope hour Household Deities hung Icarius Italy light line 15 lived look Lord mind musing Newington Green night o'er once Petrarch Pleasures of Memory poems Poet resigned Richard Sharp rise Rogers round sacred sail Samuel Rogers sate says scene secret shade shed shine sigh silent sleep smile song soon sorrow soul spirit stood Stothard Stourbridge sung sweet swell taste tears thee thine Thomas Rogers thou thought thro trace trembling triumph Turner Twas verse virtue voice wake wandering wave weep wild wings wish Worcestershire young youth