PoemsMoxon, 1860 - 306 pages |
From inside the book
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Page iii
... 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 hold communion with the wise and just ! — Yet ...
... 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 hold communion with the wise and just ! — Yet ...
Page xxi
... heart was wont to share ' From reason's dawn each pleasure and each care ; ' With whom , alas ! I fondly hoped to know " The humble walks of happiness below ; ' I thy blessed nature now unites above ' An angel's pity with a brother's ...
... heart was wont to share ' From reason's dawn each pleasure and each care ; ' With whom , alas ! I fondly hoped to know " The humble walks of happiness below ; ' I thy blessed nature now unites above ' An angel's pity with a brother's ...
Page xxxv
... heart of her husband . Mr. Rogers had a great regard for Lord Holland , in whom he found a kindred love of letters , of civil and religious liberty , and of his uncle Charles Fox ; and when he addresses Fox in his poem , he ends ...
... heart of her husband . Mr. Rogers had a great regard for Lord Holland , in whom he found a kindred love of letters , of civil and religious liberty , and of his uncle Charles Fox ; and when he addresses Fox in his poem , he ends ...
Page lii
... heart could be best uttered in the language of the nursery ; and as an example of lofty thoughts made yet more striking because clothed in simple language , he would quote Mrs. Barbauld's lines beginning- ' Life we've been long together ...
... heart could be best uttered in the language of the nursery ; and as an example of lofty thoughts made yet more striking because clothed in simple language , he would quote Mrs. Barbauld's lines beginning- ' Life we've been long together ...
Page lxiii
... heart and character laid open before the reader ; and thus in Mr. Rogers's poems , we find- ' his mind unfolded in his page . ' In the Preface to the ' Pleasures of Memory , ' he tells us that his aim was to- ' Enlighten climes , and ...
... heart and character laid open before the reader ; and thus in Mr. Rogers's poems , we find- ' his mind unfolded in his page . ' In the Preface to the ' Pleasures of Memory , ' he tells us that his aim was to- ' Enlighten climes , and ...
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