The Works of the English Poets: With Prefaces, Biographical and Critical, Volume 11Samuel Johnson C. Bathurst, 1779 |
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Page 4
... verse commend , For wonders always did his name attend . 10 Though now ( alas ! ) in the fad grave he lies , Yet fhall his praise for ever live , and laurels from it rise . Great were the toils attending the command Of an ungrateful and ...
... verse commend , For wonders always did his name attend . 10 Though now ( alas ! ) in the fad grave he lies , Yet fhall his praise for ever live , and laurels from it rise . Great were the toils attending the command Of an ungrateful and ...
Page 24
... verse could frame : Oft I in vain invok'd my Clio's name . The more I ftrove , the more I fail'd I chaf'd , I bit my pen , curft my dull fkull , and rail'd , Refolv'd to force m ' untoward thought , and at the last prevail'd . A line ...
... verse could frame : Oft I in vain invok'd my Clio's name . The more I ftrove , the more I fail'd I chaf'd , I bit my pen , curft my dull fkull , and rail'd , Refolv'd to force m ' untoward thought , and at the last prevail'd . A line ...
Page 32
... verse could frame : Oft I in vain invok'd my Clio's name . The more I ftrove , the more I fail'd I chaf'd , I bit my pen , curft my dull fkull , and rail'd , Refolv'd to force m ' untoward thought , and at the last prevail'd . A line ...
... verse could frame : Oft I in vain invok'd my Clio's name . The more I ftrove , the more I fail'd I chaf'd , I bit my pen , curft my dull fkull , and rail'd , Refolv'd to force m ' untoward thought , and at the last prevail'd . A line ...
Page 64
... verse to undertake . This all men thought ; but you are born , we find , T'out - do the expectations of mankind ; Since you've fo well the noble task perform'd , Envy's appeas'd , and prejudice difarm'd : For when the rich original we ...
... verse to undertake . This all men thought ; but you are born , we find , T'out - do the expectations of mankind ; Since you've fo well the noble task perform'd , Envy's appeas'd , and prejudice difarm'd : For when the rich original we ...
Page 65
... verse ; Inftead of comedy with nasty farce . Would Plautus , Terence e'er , have been fo lewd T'have dreft Jack - pudding up to catch the crowd ? Or Sophocles five tedious acts have made , To fhew a whining fool in love betray'd By fome ...
... verse ; Inftead of comedy with nasty farce . Would Plautus , Terence e'er , have been fo lewd T'have dreft Jack - pudding up to catch the crowd ? Or Sophocles five tedious acts have made , To fhew a whining fool in love betray'd By fome ...
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Common terms and phrases
Acontius arms beſt bleffings bleft boaſt breaſt Cæfar caft charms Cyclops Cydippe dæmon Daphnis defire delight dreadful e'er eaſe ev'n eyes facred fad grave fafe faid fair falfe fame fate fatire fear feem'd fent fhall fhew fhining fhould fighs fince firft firſt flain flave fmiles foft fome fong fools forrow foul ftill ftreams fuch fure fwain good-natur'd grace grave he lies head heart heaven herſelf himſelf Hippolytus honour juft king laft laſt laurels lefs lord lov'd Lucretius mighty mind moft MOPSUS moſt mournful Mufe Muſe muſt myſelf noble nymphs o'er peace pleaſe pleaſure Poet praiſe pride rage rais'd raiſe reft reſt rife riſe royal ſee ſhall ſhe ſpeak ſtand ſtate ſtill ſuch Tartuffe tell thee thefe theſe thofe thoſe thou thouſand triumph Twas twill verfe virtue Whilft whofe wonder Worfe
Popular passages
Page 151 - prove kind, And fill our empty brain ; Yet if rough Neptune rouze the wind, To wave the azure main, Our paper, pen, and ink, and we, Roll up and down our fhips at fea, With a fa, &c.
Page 152 - The Dutch would fcorn fo weak a foe, And quit their fort at Goree : For what refiftance can they find From men who've left their hearts behind ! With a fa, .&c. * VI. Let wind and weather do its
Page 151 - How hard it is to write ; The Mufes now, and Neptune too, We muft implore to write to you, With a fa, la, la, la, la. II.
Page 153 - When any mournful tune you hear, That dies in every note ; As if it figh'd with each man's care, For being fo remote ; Think how often love we've
Page 22 - By titles, which but few can boaft, A moft juft mafter, and a faithful friend ? One who never yet did wrong To high or low, to old or young ? Of him what orphan can complain ? Of him what widow make her moan? But fuch as wifh him here again, And mifs his goodnefs now
Page 23 - With fpoils of viftory and glory fraught. To him then every heart was open, down From the great man to the clown : In him rejoic'd, to him inclin'd ; And as his health round the glad board did pafs, Each honeft fellow cry'd, Fill full my glafs; And fhew'd the fullnefs of his mind. No
Page 44 - vain have prov'd the labours of the ftage, -*.-*- In ftriving to reclaim a vicious age ! Poets may write, the mifchief to impeach ; You care as little what the poets teach, As you regard at church what parfons preach. But where fuch follies and fuch vices reign, What honeft pen
Page 46 - weary marches, fleeplefs nights, For this feeds hard, and lodges cold ; Which can't be bought with hills of gold. Since wealth and power too weak we find, To quell the tumults of the mind ; Or from the monarch's roofs of
Page 21 - Ballads, and all the fpurious excefs Of ills that malice could devife, Or ever fwarm'd from a licentious prefs, Hung round about him like a fpell : And in his own hand too was writ, That worthy piece of modern wit, The country's late appeal. But from fuch ills when will our wretched
Page 48 - of eager love, She coldly calls me friend. Ah, Sylvia ! thus in vain you ftrive To aft a healer's part, 'Twill keep but lingering pain alive, Alas ! and break my heart. When, on my lonely, penfive bed I lay me down to reft, In hope to calm my raging head, And cool my burning breaft. Her cruelty all