PoemsMoxon, 1860 - 306 pages |
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Page xxi
... speaks of Thomas's death , and describes his character in the ' Pleasures of Memory ' : ' Oh thou ! with whom my heart was wont to share ' From reason's dawn each pleasure and each care ; ' With whom , alas ! I fondly hoped to know ...
... speaks of Thomas's death , and describes his character in the ' Pleasures of Memory ' : ' Oh thou ! with whom my heart was wont to share ' From reason's dawn each pleasure and each care ; ' With whom , alas ! I fondly hoped to know ...
Page xxv
... speak ' openly those noble sentiments which before they ' hardly dared to think of . " During this short visit , and in the midst of this political excitement , he took only a hasty view of the Orleans Gallery of pictures , which a few ...
... speak ' openly those noble sentiments which before they ' hardly dared to think of . " During this short visit , and in the midst of this political excitement , he took only a hasty view of the Orleans Gallery of pictures , which a few ...
Page xxxvii
... speaks of in the lines Written in the Highlands , ' on a third visit in 1812 ; when , on again seeing the grey sundial in the kirkyard at Luss , he says : - " That dial so well known to me ! ' -Tho ' many a shadow it had shed ...
... speaks of in the lines Written in the Highlands , ' on a third visit in 1812 ; when , on again seeing the grey sundial in the kirkyard at Luss , he says : - " That dial so well known to me ! ' -Tho ' many a shadow it had shed ...
Page xli
... speaks of it as a place of refuge for all who were oppressed in Europe : ' Assembling here all nations shall be blest ; ' The sad be comforted ; the weary rest ; ' Untouched shall drop the fetters from the slave . ' This last prophecy ...
... speaks of it as a place of refuge for all who were oppressed in Europe : ' Assembling here all nations shall be blest ; ' The sad be comforted ; the weary rest ; ' Untouched shall drop the fetters from the slave . ' This last prophecy ...
Page lvii
... speaks of both in ' Human Life ' and in Crabbe's power of describing he praises in Moore he calls ' a poet of such singular felicity as to ' give a lustre to all he touches . ' Of Wordsworth he quotes ' a noble sonnet . ' Of Scott he ...
... speaks of both in ' Human Life ' and in Crabbe's power of describing he praises in Moore he calls ' a poet of such singular felicity as to ' give a lustre to all he touches . ' Of Wordsworth he quotes ' a noble sonnet . ' Of Scott he ...
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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 reign 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