The Life, and Posthumous Writings, of William Cowper, Esqr: With an Introductory Letter to the Right Honourable Earl Cowper, Tom 4J. Seagrave, 1806 |
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Strona 130
... reader may recollect from a passage in one of his Letters to me ) with a prospect that this intended poem might form a portion of a very ample original confederate work , which we hoped to produce in concert with the united powers of ...
... reader may recollect from a passage in one of his Letters to me ) with a prospect that this intended poem might form a portion of a very ample original confederate work , which we hoped to produce in concert with the united powers of ...
Strona 131
... readers the minute and imperfect fragment of a project so mighty . Yet even the few verses which Cowper had thrown on paper as the commencement of such a work , will be read with peculiar interest , if there is truth , as I feel there ...
... readers the minute and imperfect fragment of a project so mighty . Yet even the few verses which Cowper had thrown on paper as the commencement of such a work , will be read with peculiar interest , if there is truth , as I feel there ...
Strona 152
... reader : my " Animus meminisse horret , luctuque refugit . " I shall therefore only say , that although it has been my lot to be acquainted with affliction in a va- riety of shapes , I hardly ever felt the anguish of sympathy with an ...
... reader : my " Animus meminisse horret , luctuque refugit . " I shall therefore only say , that although it has been my lot to be acquainted with affliction in a va- riety of shapes , I hardly ever felt the anguish of sympathy with an ...
Strona 177
... si- lence , and heard all his poems recited in order , till the reader arrived at the history of John Gilpin , which he begged not to hear . Mr. Johnson proceed- M VOL . 4 . ed to his manuscript poems : -To these he wil- 177.
... si- lence , and heard all his poems recited in order , till the reader arrived at the history of John Gilpin , which he begged not to hear . Mr. Johnson proceed- M VOL . 4 . ed to his manuscript poems : -To these he wil- 177.
Strona 185
... reader will find in the Appendix . In his new residence , he amused himself with translating a few fables of Gay into Latin verse . The fable which he used to recite , when a child- " The Hare and many Friends " -became one of his ...
... reader will find in the Appendix . In his new residence , he amused himself with translating a few fables of Gay into Latin verse . The fable which he used to recite , when a child- " The Hare and many Friends " -became one of his ...
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Adieu admirable affectionate afflicted appear bard bird-lime brother CALLIMACHU charm Cowper DEAR FRIEND dearest degree delight Dereham distress Eartham endeavour Esqr ev'ry excellent expressed eyes favourite feel friendship genius give grace Greek hand happy haste heart Homer honour hope Iliad John Throckmorton Johnny Johnson justly kind labour Lady Hesketh Latin live Lord Thurlow Mary melancholy memory merit Milton mind morning nature never nihil obliged Odyssey once passage perhaps person pleasure poem poet poetical poetry Pope powers praise present quæ Qualia quam quod racter reader reason received rejoice Revd Romney SAMUEL ROSE seems shew sight soon sorrow spect spirit sublime sufferings talents Task tell tender thee thine thing thou tibi tion translation truly truth Unwin verse vex'd W. C. LETTER Weston Whig WILLIAM COWPER WILLIAM HAYLEY wish write