The Works of the English Poets, from Chaucer to Cowper: Cowley, Denham, MiltonAlexander Chalmers J. Johnson, 1810 |
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Strona 12
... strength of thought to happiness of language . If , by a more noble and more adequate conception , that be considered as wit , which is at once natural and new , that , which , though not obvious , is , upon its first production ...
... strength of thought to happiness of language . If , by a more noble and more adequate conception , that be considered as wit , which is at once natural and new , that , which , though not obvious , is , upon its first production ...
Strona 20
... must be done ; And I , as giddy travellers must do , Which stray or sleep all day , and having lost Light and strength , dark and tir'd , must then ride post . 21 All that man has to do is to live 20 LIFE OF COWLEY .
... must be done ; And I , as giddy travellers must do , Which stray or sleep all day , and having lost Light and strength , dark and tir'd , must then ride post . 21 All that man has to do is to live 20 LIFE OF COWLEY .
Strona 24
... strength always appears in his agility ; his volatility is not the flutter of a light , but the bound of an elastic mind . His levity never leaves his learning behind it ; the moralist , the po- litician , and the critic , mingle their ...
... strength always appears in his agility ; his volatility is not the flutter of a light , but the bound of an elastic mind . His levity never leaves his learning behind it ; the moralist , the po- litician , and the critic , mingle their ...
Strona 27
... strength . The connection is supplied with great per- spicuity ; and the thoughts , which to a reader of less skill seem thrown together by chance , are concatenated without any abruption . Though the English ode cannot be called a ...
... strength . The connection is supplied with great per- spicuity ; and the thoughts , which to a reader of less skill seem thrown together by chance , are concatenated without any abruption . Though the English ode cannot be called a ...
Strona 71
... strength before . Toppose him still , who once has conquer'd so , Were now to be your rebel , not your foe ; Fortune henceforth will more of providence have , And rather be your friend than be your slave . TO A LADY WHO MADE POSIES FOR ...
... strength before . Toppose him still , who once has conquer'd so , Were now to be your rebel , not your foe ; Fortune henceforth will more of providence have , And rather be your friend than be your slave . TO A LADY WHO MADE POSIES FOR ...
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ABRAHAM COWLEY Æneid Anacreon Androgeus angels appear arms beauty behold blest blood bold breast bright Chromius clouds Constantia Cowley David death delight divine doth Earth envy eternal ev'n eyes fair fall fame fate fear fire flame friends gentle give glory gods gold hand happy haste hath heart Heaven Hell honour Jabesh Joab king learning less light live Lucifer lyre mighty Milton mind Moab Muse Nahash Nature ne'er never night noble numbers o'er Ovid Paradise Paradise Lost Pindar pleasure poem poets praise pride prince proud Pyrrhus rage rich Rome sacred Satan Saul Saul's seem'd shine sight smiling bank soul spirits stood sword tears thee thine things thought tree Twas Twill verse Virg Virgil virtue Whilst whole wings wise wonder words wound youth