Horæ Lyricæ: Poems, Chiefly of the Lyric Kind, in Three Books, Sacred : I. To Devotion and Piety, II. To Virtue, Honour and Friendship, III. To the Memory of the DeadW. Whetstone and B. Edmond, 1753 - 299 |
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Strona vi
... shall be laid to the Charge of their Writings , and be dreadfully required at their Hands ? The Reverend Mr. COLLIER has fet this awful Scene before them in juft and flam- ing Colours . If the Application were not too rude and uncivil ...
... shall be laid to the Charge of their Writings , and be dreadfully required at their Hands ? The Reverend Mr. COLLIER has fet this awful Scene before them in juft and flam- ing Colours . If the Application were not too rude and uncivil ...
Strona viii
... Shall mortal Man be more just than God ? & c . Job iv . When he describes the Safety of the Righteous , he hides him from the Scourge of the Tongue , he makes him laugh at Deftruction and Famine , he brings the Stones of the Field into ...
... Shall mortal Man be more just than God ? & c . Job iv . When he describes the Safety of the Righteous , he hides him from the Scourge of the Tongue , he makes him laugh at Deftruction and Famine , he brings the Stones of the Field into ...
Strona ix
... shall not return ; it is a Land of Darkness , it is Darkness itself , the Land of the Shadow of Death ; all Confufion and Dif- order , and where the Light is as Darkness . This is my Houfe , there have I made my Bed : I have faid to ...
... shall not return ; it is a Land of Darkness , it is Darkness itself , the Land of the Shadow of Death ; all Confufion and Dif- order , and where the Light is as Darkness . This is my Houfe , there have I made my Bed : I have faid to ...
Strona xii
... shall I be likened to ? And to which of all the Heathen Poets fhall we liken or compare this glorious Orator , the facred Describer of the Godhead ? The Orators of all Nations are as nothing before him , and their Words are Va- nity and ...
... shall I be likened to ? And to which of all the Heathen Poets fhall we liken or compare this glorious Orator , the facred Describer of the Godhead ? The Orators of all Nations are as nothing before him , and their Words are Va- nity and ...
Strona xv
... Shall the French Poet affright us , by faying , * De la foy d'un Chrêtien les Myfteres terribles , D ' Ornemens egayez ne font point fufceptibles ? BUT the French Critic † , in his Reflections " That the Majesty upon Eloquence , tells ...
... Shall the French Poet affright us , by faying , * De la foy d'un Chrêtien les Myfteres terribles , D ' Ornemens egayez ne font point fufceptibles ? BUT the French Critic † , in his Reflections " That the Majesty upon Eloquence , tells ...
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Popularne fragmenty
Strona ix - Such a nation might truly say to corruption, thou art my father, and to the worm, thou art my mother and my sister.
Strona x - Among the bushes they brayed ; Under the nettles they were gathered together. They were children of fools, Yea, children of base men : They were viler than the earth. And now am I their song, Yea, I am their byword.
Strona 224 - Twixt her wild passions and her will ; Haunted and hagg'd where'er she roves, By purling streams and silent groves, Or with her Furies, or her Loves. Then our own native land we hate, Too cold, too windy, or too wet ; Change the thick climate, and repair To France or Italy for air : In vain we change, in vain we fly ; Go, Sylvia, mount the whirling sky, Or...
Strona 87 - Hark, how he prays (the charming sound Dwells on his dying lips) " Forgive ! " And every groan, and gaping wound. Cries,
Strona 282 - ... depths of woe ; Young mothers, who your darling babes have found Untimely murder'd with a ghastly wound ; Ye frighted nymphs, who on the bridal bed...
Strona 168 - Safe from the smiling and the frowning world. Yet once a day drop down a gentle look On the...
Strona 79 - Now let me mount and join their song, And be an angel too ; My heart, my hand, my ear, my tongue — Here's joyful work for you.
Strona 183 - Glittering stones, and golden things, Wealth and honours that have wings, Ever fluttering to be gone, I could never call my own: Riches that the world bestows, She can take, and I can lose; But the treasures that are mine Lie afar beyond her line. When I view my spacious soul, And survey myself a whole, And enjoy myself alone, I'ma kingdom of my own.
Strona 126 - I am held in his embrace, There's not a thought attempts to rove : Each smile he wears upon his face Fixes and charms and fires my love.
Strona 8 - tis in vain to seek for bliss ; For bliss can ne'er be found, Till we arrive where Jesus is, And tread on heavenly ground.