The Works of the English Poets: With Prefaces, Biographical and Critical, Volume 57Samuel Johnson C. Bathurst, 1780 |
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Page 7
... human virtue in the heart , on death of , gone for ever , take this long adieu , turn from ill , a frail and feeble heart , a candid cenfor and a friend fevere , verfes to , Ardenna's groves fhall boast , letter on his death , B Pope 2 ...
... human virtue in the heart , on death of , gone for ever , take this long adieu , turn from ill , a frail and feeble heart , a candid cenfor and a friend fevere , verfes to , Ardenna's groves fhall boast , letter on his death , B Pope 2 ...
Page 8
... human breaft , Gray 335 virtue , ftern , rugged nurfe of , Gray 335 leaves us leifure to be good , Gray 335 fevere inftructor , but the best , Som . 330 right reafon's ever faithful friend , to thee our haughty paffions bend , hardens ...
... human breaft , Gray 335 virtue , ftern , rugged nurfe of , Gray 335 leaves us leifure to be good , Gray 335 fevere inftructor , but the best , Som . 330 right reafon's ever faithful friend , to thee our haughty paffions bend , hardens ...
Page 6
... human bodies , terrours fable every dream , Akenfide , pleasures of the imagination , Dry . 3 : 185 Pope od . 4 : 164 Aken . 12-181 189-293 odes , hymn to the Naiads , infcriptions , an epiftle to Curio , Love , an elegy , a British ...
... human bodies , terrours fable every dream , Akenfide , pleasures of the imagination , Dry . 3 : 185 Pope od . 4 : 164 Aken . 12-181 189-293 odes , hymn to the Naiads , infcriptions , an epiftle to Curio , Love , an elegy , a British ...
Page 16
... human bodies , terrours fable every dream , Akenfide , pleasures of the imagination , Dry . 3 : 185 Pope od . 4 : 164 Aken . 12-181 189-293 odes , hymn to the Naiads , infcriptions , an epiftle to Curio , Love , an elegy , a British ...
... human bodies , terrours fable every dream , Akenfide , pleasures of the imagination , Dry . 3 : 185 Pope od . 4 : 164 Aken . 12-181 189-293 odes , hymn to the Naiads , infcriptions , an epiftle to Curio , Love , an elegy , a British ...
Page 94
... human woe , is thy flight , ceafe , and flavery be no more , Confcience , court of , God's umpire , wakes despair , condemns or acquits , Pope 1 : 74 Butl . I : 201 Milt . 1 : 79 Milt . 1 : 102 Dry . I : 251 upbraiding , is the fiend ...
... human woe , is thy flight , ceafe , and flavery be no more , Confcience , court of , God's umpire , wakes despair , condemns or acquits , Pope 1 : 74 Butl . I : 201 Milt . 1 : 79 Milt . 1 : 102 Dry . I : 251 upbraiding , is the fiend ...
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Common terms and phrases
Achilles Aken Anacreontic beauty beft Black bleffing blifs breaſt Broome Buck Butl Butlo Cæfar caufe character charms Collins Cong Cowley Dæmon death defcribed Duke Dyer eclogue elegy epiftle epilogue epitaph eternal facred fame fate fatire fcience feaft fenfe Fent fhall fight firft flain flave fome fong fools forrow foul fource fpring ftand ftill ftory fure fweet Garth goddeſs gods Gray happineſs heaven himſelf Horace Hugbes Hughes hymn imitated Jove juft King laft Lanf laſt loft LVII Lytt Mall Milt mind numbers o'er paffion paraphraſed Parn Patroclus Phil Pitt plagues of Egypt pleaſe pleaſure poem poet Pope Pope il Pope od praife praiſe prefent pride Prior prologue rage reafon rife Rofc Rowe Rowe L Shen ſtate Swift Thom Tick tranflation Ulyffes univerfal verfes verſes virtue Wall Watts Weft whofe wife Young
Popular passages
Page v - of places and countries, and in accounts of remarkable events, either in the natural or political •world, and of the ancient cuftoms or antiquities ; in critical obfervations on
Page vi - with dignity ; but the former, that of the vulgar, and generally as vulgarly exprefled, yet equally true with the fententious. Proverbial fayings could not well be difarranged, without fpoiling them, or at
Page v - particulars ; namely, in prudential, moral and religious fentences; in remarkable proverbial fayings, either of a ludicrous or ferious turn ; in characters of celebrated perfons, both ancient and modern ; in
Page vi - when they could conveniently be brought within the compafs of a line, and in the very arrangement of their words, in order to preferve entire the harmony and
Page viii - exclude, from a place in an index, very many important fentences, which are without a fubftantive. Dryden again fays, -write well, or not at all:
Page vii - it may therefore lead the fentence, according to the general rule of index-making; namely, that a
Page viii - not to make a verb the leading word ; or even an adverb, if ufed emphatically ; for
Page vii - but which it neceflarily implies, it is in all languages, both learned and unlearned, taken
Page vii - not to make them the leading words : Dryden, for inftance, to mention no other, fays,
Page 254 - Ichor, blood of gods, Ida, fount-full hill, fair nurfe of fountains and of game,