Milt. 1:213 Watts 47 God creates good out of evil, hand moft juft, rewarding or afflicting, Watts 53 Mall. 262 Mall. 265 Pope 1: 190 Aken. 147 Parn. 114 Milt. 1: 75, 76, 79. Parn. 80 Pitt 219 Milt. 2:127 Parn. 107 -- is ever prefent, from seeming evil Rill educing good, and better thence again in infinite progreffion, - of harvest how good, Thom. 1: 194 Thom. 1: 194 Thom. 1 : 194 Thom. I: 112 ➡ who pours abundance over flowing fields, Thom, 1; 112 God never wants a voice to speak his will, raifes fit inftruments to execute his will, --presence of, worth dying, taking his name in vain, · Rowe L. 402 Cory. 2: 172 Watts 153 Watts 347 image of, destroyed by fin, in the nature of each, founds its blifs, my truft in dangers, and my shield in fight, only to be ferved, punishes to fpare, repofe in, fhunning mad despair, fuch as Lucretius drew, without a thought, - regardless of our merit or default, his judgments against finners, -- in externals cannot place content, bright evidence reveals, of the filver bow, avenge thy fervant, fierce as he mov'd his filver fhafts refound, Goddess fhrin'd in every tree, Milt. 2: 102 ·Pope 2: 59 Pope 2: 98 Parn. 173 Parn. 173 Milt, 2: 207 Parn. 227 Parn. 227 Pope 3: 249. Pope 3: 249 ·Cor. 2:53 Pope 2: 71 Pope il. 2:6 Pope il. 1: 39- Pope 1: 332 Gods, 'tis impious to contend with,; first pay thy humble homage to, who revere, the gods will blefs, fay of, nought unfeemly, nought profane, Pitt 200 Rowe 2 Pope il. 1:46 Weft. 137 turn, to various ends, the various talents of, Pope od. 4:31. the weak enlighten and the wife confound, beft know, what's for our good, live like, though we die like men, have fearching eyes, . nor bread of man fuftains, as we are by Homer told, Popeod. 4: 219 Pope od. 219 King 354 King 353 Pope il. 1: 50 Pom. 323 Parn. 41 Pate od. 3: 280 Pope il 1: 165 Swift 1:110 can in celeftial language fcold, Swift 1: 110 debate of, Jove fpoke, their tumults ceafe,, that make, fhall keep the worthy friends, Pope il, 1: 141 Gay 1:-331 Gay 1:331 Gold, for fome to heap, and fome to throw away, Pope 2: 118 bribes a fenate, and the land's betray'd, if secret sap, heroes may fight, and patriots rave in vain, ib. Swift 1:74 Swift 174 Pope 2: 119 drags the flavish world in chains, ah cruel thirst! rage of, difdains a fhore, pleasure buys, fordid love of, unkingly thirft of, facred hunger of, the greatest God, we worship, though we pray to heaven, attractive gold! to thee each stubborn virtue bends, thy zealots ransack fea and land, reftlefs difturber of mankind, canft thou give health, or peace of mind, - corruption, luxury, and envy, mischiefs of, West 259 Gold |