PoemsMoxon, 1860 - 306 pages |
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Page xxv
... described it as by the author of the ' Ode to Superstition . ' was at once most favourably received and universally admired . The Monthly Review , which was still the chief organ of literary praise and blame , praised it highly , saying ...
... described it as by the author of the ' Ode to Superstition . ' was at once most favourably received and universally admired . The Monthly Review , which was still the chief organ of literary praise and blame , praised it highly , saying ...
Page xxxi
... described in his Diversions of Purley , ' and about the political changes then hoped for and demanded by the reformers . Of all the able men whom Mr. Rogers had the good fortune to know , he thought Horne Tooke in conversation the most ...
... described in his Diversions of Purley , ' and about the political changes then hoped for and demanded by the reformers . Of all the able men whom Mr. Rogers had the good fortune to know , he thought Horne Tooke in conversation the most ...
Page xxxii
... described in his poem : - ' A walk in Spring - Grattan , like those with thee ' By the heath - side ( who had not envied me ? ) ' When the sweet limes , so full of bees in June , ' Led us to meet beneath their boughs at noon ; ' And ...
... described in his poem : - ' A walk in Spring - Grattan , like those with thee ' By the heath - side ( who had not envied me ? ) ' When the sweet limes , so full of bees in June , ' Led us to meet beneath their boughs at noon ; ' And ...
Page xlix
... described it , of the unsold copies , and set himself to the task of making it better . He at the same time engaged the services of several artists to ornament it with plates descriptive of the places mentioned . In 1830 he published a ...
... described it , of the unsold copies , and set himself to the task of making it better . He at the same time engaged the services of several artists to ornament it with plates descriptive of the places mentioned . In 1830 he published a ...
Page 50
... in the twenty - second year of his age ; and with what feel- ings must the Scholar of Aristotle have approached the ground described by Homer in that Poem which had been his delight from his childhood , and which records 50.
... in the twenty - second year of his age ; and with what feel- ings must the Scholar of Aristotle have approached the ground described by Homer in that Poem which had been his delight from his childhood , and which records 50.
Common terms and phrases
admire ancient Assembly of Evil bids blessed blest breathe bright called CANTO charm Cicero Columbus Cortes courser dark delight dream Euripides father fear flowers fond gate gaze glory glows grey grove hail hand hear heart Heaven Hence Herodotus Herrera Hist holy hope hour Household Deities hung inspire Italy light line 15 line 28 live look mind musing Newington Green night o'er once Petrarch poems Poet resigned rise Rogers round sacred sail Samuel Rogers sate says scene secret shade shattered hero shed shifting sail shine shore sigh silent sleep smile song soon sorrow soul spirit spring stood Stothard sung sweet swell tears thee thine Thomas Rogers thou thought thro trace trembling triumphs Twas vale VIRGIL's tomb virtue voice Voyage wake wandering wave weep wild wind wings wish young youth