I can assure the reader what would have been, had this edition been delayed. The following poems were got abroad, and in a great many hands ; it were vain to expect that, among so many admirers of Mr. The Works of the English Poets - Page 12edited by - 1779Full view - About this book
| Edmund Waller - 1744 - 496 pages
...up, andreverenc'd like religious reliques. And, I am fure, take away the * mille anni, and impartial reafoning will tell us there is as much due to the memory of \ In the Preface to bis Works. * Alluding to that Verfe in Juvenal, * * • Et uni cedit Homero Propter... | |
| Edmund Waller - 1768 - 366 pages
...religious reliques. And, I am fure, take away the " * " mille anni," and impartial reafoning will tell nts there is as much due to the memory of Mr. WALLER,...of antiquity. But, to wave the difpute now of what tught to have been done •. I can affure the Reader, what tasitld have been, had this edition been... | |
| Edmund Waller, Percival Stockdale - 1772 - 330 pages
...and reverenced like religious reliques. And, I am fure, take away the " * mille anni," and impartial reafoning will tell us there is as much due to the...difpute now of what ought to have been done ; I can allure the Reader, what iveuld have been, had this edition been delayed. The following Poems were got... | |
| Francis Atterbury - 1783 - 478 pages
...up and reverenced like religious reliques. And, I am fure, take away the mille anni *, and impartial reafoning will tell us there is as much due to the...to the moft celebrated names of antiquity. But, to waive the difpute now of what ought to have been done ; I can afl'ure the reader what would have been,... | |
| Edmund Waller - 1806 - 320 pages
...reverenced like religious relics : and I am sure, take away the tnille anni "', and impartial reasoning will tell us, there is as much due to the memory of Mr. Waller, as to the most celebrated names of Antiquity. But, to wave the dispute now of what might to have been done, I... | |
| Alexander Chalmers - 1810 - 654 pages
...reverenced like religious relics. And, I am sure, take away the " millc auni ' ," and impartial reasoning will tell us there is as much due to the memory of Mr. Waller, as to the most celebrated names of antiquity. But, to wave the dispute now, of what ought to have been done,... | |
| British poets - 1822 - 280 pages
...reverenced like religious relics : and I am sure, take away the mille am1.!,'', and impartial reasoning will tell us, there is as much due to the memory of Mr. Waller, as to the most celebrated names of antiquity. But, to wave the dispute now of what might to have been done, I... | |
| Edmund Gosse - 1885 - 260 pages
...reverenc'd, like religious reliques. And I am sure, take away the mille anni, and impartial reasoning will tell us, there is as much due to the memory of Mr. Waller, as to the most celebrated names of antiquity. But to waive the dispute now of what ought to have been done ;... | |
| Edmund Gosse - 1885 - 266 pages
...reverenc'd, like religious reliques. And I am sure, take away the mille anni, and impartial reasoning will tell us, there is as much due to the memory of Mr. Waller, as to the most celebrated names of antiquity. But to waive the dispute now of what ought to have been done ;... | |
| 1921 - 286 pages
...with an English dress, and they repaid him with extravagant praise like this : " Impartial reasoning will tell us there is as much due to the memory of Mr. Waller as to the most celebrated names of antiquity." [1690.] These services could not have preserved him readers for... | |
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