PoemsMoxon, 1860 - 306 pages |
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Page xxxiv
... feelings for a literary friend , and at the same time marked his disapproval of the harsh laws and of the Tory government which could so treat a learned man of spotless character , who was respected by all who knew him . While in ...
... feelings for a literary friend , and at the same time marked his disapproval of the harsh laws and of the Tory government which could so treat a learned man of spotless character , who was respected by all who knew him . While in ...
Page xxxvi
... feelings with which the student of art and history looked upon that grand statue , which ignorance had wilfully knocked to pieces and left a headless and limbless trunk , and which yet in that broken state the artists studied with ...
... feelings with which the student of art and history looked upon that grand statue , which ignorance had wilfully knocked to pieces and left a headless and limbless trunk , and which yet in that broken state the artists studied with ...
Page xlix
Samuel Rogers. much what he saw on his travels , as the feelings with which every man of education and refinement would wish to view a land ennobled by great actions , and familiar to us by classic recollections , and one to which ...
Samuel Rogers. much what he saw on his travels , as the feelings with which every man of education and refinement would wish to view a land ennobled by great actions , and familiar to us by classic recollections , and one to which ...
Page lii
... feelings on bringing his great historical work to a close , with that in which Cowper describes the same feelings when he had finished his translation of Homer ; and he placed the simple narrative of the Poet above the more measured ...
... feelings on bringing his great historical work to a close , with that in which Cowper describes the same feelings when he had finished his translation of Homer ; and he placed the simple narrative of the Poet above the more measured ...
Page lvi
... feeling as yet unable to make his works known , has breakfasted with Mr. Rogers , and been by him introduced to men of eminence in the same path , whom he had perhaps heard of or read of , and has walked home after breakfast an altered ...
... feeling as yet unable to make his works known , has breakfasted with Mr. Rogers , and been by him introduced to men of eminence in the same path , whom he had perhaps heard of or read of , and has walked home after breakfast an altered ...
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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