Original poems, in the amatory, heroic, pathetic, and other styles. By a traveller [signing himself J.H. 13 pt. with various imprints and a collective title-leaf].1826 |
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Rezultatai 1–5 iš 5
6 psl.
... hopes to destroy ; Extend through his life , your heart - cheering refulgence , And listen , and plead - for this Deaf and Dumb Boy ! J. H. MARY , ADIEU . WHEN late I saw my Mary 6 By the Moon, Dearest Mary 13 Neja, the Maid of the Blythe.
... hopes to destroy ; Extend through his life , your heart - cheering refulgence , And listen , and plead - for this Deaf and Dumb Boy ! J. H. MARY , ADIEU . WHEN late I saw my Mary 6 By the Moon, Dearest Mary 13 Neja, the Maid of the Blythe.
7 psl.
John Hugman. MARY , ADIEU . WHEN late I saw my Mary dear , What poignant anguish fill'd my heart ; The evening gale blew cold and drear , For we , alas , were forc'd to part ! I wept upon her lovely breast , She turn'd to hide her ...
John Hugman. MARY , ADIEU . WHEN late I saw my Mary dear , What poignant anguish fill'd my heart ; The evening gale blew cold and drear , For we , alas , were forc'd to part ! I wept upon her lovely breast , She turn'd to hide her ...
15 psl.
... late The strong similitude of fate , Between thy state and mine ; But , unto which the palm is due , As more delightful of the two , Let Moralists define . My wife on me an arm reclines , Chaste , as on thee , thy ivy twines , My ...
... late The strong similitude of fate , Between thy state and mine ; But , unto which the palm is due , As more delightful of the two , Let Moralists define . My wife on me an arm reclines , Chaste , as on thee , thy ivy twines , My ...
27 psl.
... late , He LEAVES , or FOLLOWS ME . When the last trumpet's awful strain Spreads fear through every LAND , Он , GOD ! say , shall we meet again , In HEAVEN , at THY RIGHT HAND ? And THERE our adoration prove , Amid CELESTIAL POW'RS- With ...
... late , He LEAVES , or FOLLOWS ME . When the last trumpet's awful strain Spreads fear through every LAND , Он , GOD ! say , shall we meet again , In HEAVEN , at THY RIGHT HAND ? And THERE our adoration prove , Amid CELESTIAL POW'RS- With ...
36 psl.
... late ; Three short liv'd struggles , imbecile and vain , Leaves Gallia's Despot - master of the plain . No rallying conflict can the PRUSSIAN try ; His chiefs desert him , and his vassals fly ; He takes of royalty the sad embrace ...
... late ; Three short liv'd struggles , imbecile and vain , Leaves Gallia's Despot - master of the plain . No rallying conflict can the PRUSSIAN try ; His chiefs desert him , and his vassals fly ; He takes of royalty the sad embrace ...
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
affection's amid APOLLO arm'd arms artless ask of thee Bards beneath thy betray'd bloom blush bosom bow'r brave Britannia Britons BUONAPARTE burn CELESTIAL charms crown'd Deaf and Dumb dear Girls DEAREST MARY deathless decree dire Dumb Boy e'er embrace eyes fair fame Farewell fate feelings flow'r fond Gallia's GAME OF BOWLS give glides glory graceful grot guile Halesworth hand Heaven heavenly heaves Henceforth Hero hour Impels INGRATITUDE IVY-CLAD BOWER Joseph,-the Deaf Lara Merblue laurels liv'd live LOCKWOOD love-lorn Lowestoft maid Mourns Muse native ne'er Nelson's numbers o'er Ocean's opiate Peace Pedestrian perchance pity poignant anguish pow'r pride Prussia Quell'd rais'd rapture Resolv'd ruffle Sav'd scene sing sleep smile soft sorrow soul Spain sting storm subdues Summer-House sweet sword talismanic tears Thou thro throne Thy garden's thy ivy thy land thy urn tide tomb Tyrant unassuming verdant Vet'ran vile WELLINGTON Whoe'er witness'd
Populiarios ištraukos
11 psl. - Tho' dear a Female's face, or form ; Tho' elegant her attitude ; We fly, as from the winged storm — If she pours forth INGRATITUDE.
25 psl. - Bowling too short, you but obstruct the Green, Like him who loiters on Life's public scene; Whoe'er at bowls, or business causes strife Will rubs on Greens receive — and eke in Life ; One bowling trick avoid in moral play, Ah, never, never block your neighbour's way. These rules observed, a Man may play his game, On Bowling Greens, or through the World, with fame.
25 psl. - Life, like the Game of Bowls, is but an end, Which to play well, this moral verse attend. Throw not your bowl too rashly from your hand, First let its course by reason's eye be plann'd ; Lest it rolls useless o'er the verdant plain, Like heedless Life — that finishes in vain. Know well your bias ; — here the moral school Scarce needs a comment on the bowling rule ; Play not too wide, with caution eye your cast, Use not extent of Green, or Life, to waste : Nor yet too straight — in Life observe...