An Asylum for Fugitive Pieces, in Prose and Verse, Not in Any Other Collection: with Several Pieces Never Before Published. A New Ed., Including Pieces Not in the Former Edition, and Several Never Before Printed, Band 2J. Debrett, 1786 |
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Seite 5
... lovely Redlynch ! where Thy graffy prospects , and thy vernal air ? O ! fend thy fpacious waters to my aid , Lend me thy lofty elm's protecting shade ; VOL . II . B Hence . Henceforth within thy limits let me live O ! England.
... lovely Redlynch ! where Thy graffy prospects , and thy vernal air ? O ! fend thy fpacious waters to my aid , Lend me thy lofty elm's protecting shade ; VOL . II . B Hence . Henceforth within thy limits let me live O ! England.
Seite 6
Henceforth within thy limits let me live O ! England ! injured climate ! I forgive Thy fpleen - inflicting mists , thy gloomy days , I'll think thy clouds but intercept such rays As now rage here , before whofe hostile blaze The waters ...
Henceforth within thy limits let me live O ! England ! injured climate ! I forgive Thy fpleen - inflicting mists , thy gloomy days , I'll think thy clouds but intercept such rays As now rage here , before whofe hostile blaze The waters ...
Seite 20
... live , And growing honours grace thy fhrine ; So , while thy bright examples fire , May he , for whom I wake the lyre , With dauntless voice affert his country's right , By flattery unfeduc'd , unaw'd by lawless might . E PODE II . Yes ...
... live , And growing honours grace thy fhrine ; So , while thy bright examples fire , May he , for whom I wake the lyre , With dauntless voice affert his country's right , By flattery unfeduc'd , unaw'd by lawless might . E PODE II . Yes ...
Seite 28
... Live happy you . I ( fuch tho ' imperious law Of strong neceffity ) for that repose , Which here my pray'rs divide , in vain must pine : For in th ' unfocial cloyfter doom'd to draw My lingering days , while yet this bofom glows With ...
... Live happy you . I ( fuch tho ' imperious law Of strong neceffity ) for that repose , Which here my pray'rs divide , in vain must pine : For in th ' unfocial cloyfter doom'd to draw My lingering days , while yet this bofom glows With ...
Seite 70
... live an exile from his wit , No more your notes will he admit , Nor Steevens now endure you . & c . vol . I. p . 174.-Mr. Bryant , however , has convinced his lordship , that the Ouran Outangs never can attain the ufe of fpeech ; for ...
... live an exile from his wit , No more your notes will he admit , Nor Steevens now endure you . & c . vol . I. p . 174.-Mr. Bryant , however , has convinced his lordship , that the Ouran Outangs never can attain the ufe of fpeech ; for ...
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An Asylum for Fugitive Pieces, in Prose and Verse, Not in Any Other ... John 1737-1805 Almon Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2021 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Anacreon Ballynamoniora beauty behold blefs bleft bluſhes boaſt bofom BONNEL THORNTON breaſt CHARLES TOWNSHEND charms COUNTESS OF BRISTOL courſe dæmon dear e'en e'er EPIGRAM ev'ry eyes facred faid fair Fal de ral fame Faſhion fate fcene fhade fhall fhew fhine fhore fide figh fight fing fire firſt fmile foft fome fong fons foon forrow foul ftill fuch FUGITIVE PIECES fure fweet grace Haftings heart heaven himſelf honour LADY laft laſt loft Lord maid MARIA LINLEY moft moſt mufe muft muſe muſt ne'er nymph o'er PINDAR Pindus PITT pleaſe pleaſure pow'r praiſe prefent PRETTYMAN raiſe reign rife rofe ROLLIAD ſcene ſhade ſhall ſhe ſhould ſkies ſmile SONNET ſpeak ſpread ſtate ſtill ſtrain ſtreams ſweet taſte thee thefe theſe thine thofe thoſe thou thro Twas vafe virtue Whilft whofe Whoſe wife woes
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 40 - This, in both sexes, is covered with a deep black ; above which, arches are drawn one over another as high as the short ribs.
Seite 84 - E'er left himself behind ? The restless thought and wayward will, And discontent attend him still, Nor quit him while he lives ; At sea, care follows in the wind ; At land, it mounts the pad behind, Or with the post-boy drives.
Seite 62 - The people themselves are so far from concealing their connexion with such a society as a disgrace, that they boast of it as a privilege ; and both myself and Mr. Banks, when particular persons have been pointed out to us as members of the Arreoy, have questioned them about it, and received the account that has been here given from their own lips. They have acknowledged that they had long been of this accursed...
Seite 60 - Wallis has demonftrated in the account of her 6~ voyage, voyage, [vol.1, p. 489, 490.] and nothing is more certain than that when we arrived it had made moft dreadful ravages in the ifland. One of our people contracted it within five days after we went on...
Seite 139 - And bay the fancy'd boar with feeble sounds. For nobler sports he quits the savage fields, And all the hero to the lover yields.
Seite 83 - Round the gay cieling flies. He who enjoys, nor covets more, The lands his father held before, Is of true...
Seite 240 - But to fancy that feeds on the charms of the fair, The death of reflection's the birth of all woe ! What...
Seite 19 - YEZ ! This is, that all may learn, Whom it may happen to concern, To any lady, not a wife, Upon a lease, to last for life, By auction will be let this day, And entered on some time in May, A vacant heart ; not ornamented On plans by Chesterfield invented, A plain, old-fashioned habitation, Substantial without decoration, Large, and with room for friends to spare ; Well-situate, and in good repair.
Seite 58 - ... finger of the left hand and the middle finger of the right. The drum is made of a hollow block of wood, of a cylindrical form...
Seite 48 - ... of Europe. But the practice which is allowed to the virgin is prohibited to the woman from the moment that she has put these hopeful lessons in practice, and realized the symbols of the dance.