Poems on Several Occasions: With Some Select Essays in Prose. In Two Volumes, Volumen1J. Tonson and J. Watts., 1735 - 275 páginas |
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Página xv
... his Friends have ftill the Pleafure to hear them fre quently fung by the fineft Voices . The Tenth Book of Lucan was tranflated by Mr. Hughes long before Mr. Rowe undertook that that Author . The Occafion of it was this : PREFACE . XV.
... his Friends have ftill the Pleafure to hear them fre quently fung by the fineft Voices . The Tenth Book of Lucan was tranflated by Mr. Hughes long before Mr. Rowe undertook that that Author . The Occafion of it was this : PREFACE . XV.
Página xvii
... Voice well - skill'd in Recitative , but you under- Rand all thefe Matters much better than Your affectionate humble Servant , R. STEELE According to their Request , he made feveral Alterations in it , which , I believe , will be esteem ...
... Voice well - skill'd in Recitative , but you under- Rand all thefe Matters much better than Your affectionate humble Servant , R. STEELE According to their Request , he made feveral Alterations in it , which , I believe , will be esteem ...
Página l
... Voices all , To charm my Solitary Hours . Liften , they cry , thou penfive Swain ! Tho ' much the tuneful Sifters love The Fields , the Park , the fhady Grove : The Fields , and Park , and fhady Grove , The tuneful Sifters now difdain ...
... Voices all , To charm my Solitary Hours . Liften , they cry , thou penfive Swain ! Tho ' much the tuneful Sifters love The Fields , the Park , the fhady Grove : The Fields , and Park , and fhady Grove , The tuneful Sifters now difdain ...
Página 11
... Voice , the Mufe inspires the Song , The Heav'n - born Mufe ; e'en now fhe fprings her Flight , And bears my raptur'd Soul , thro ' untrac'd Realms of Light . We mount aloft , and , in our airy Way , Retiring Kingdoms far beneath furvey ...
... Voice , the Mufe inspires the Song , The Heav'n - born Mufe ; e'en now fhe fprings her Flight , And bears my raptur'd Soul , thro ' untrac'd Realms of Light . We mount aloft , and , in our airy Way , Retiring Kingdoms far beneath furvey ...
Página 16
... Voice to Voice th ' harmonious Notes rebound , And echoing Lyres tranfmit the volant Fugue a- round ! } Mean while the fteddy Bark , with profp'rous Gales , Fills the large Sheets of her expanded Sails , And gains th ' intended Port ...
... Voice to Voice th ' harmonious Notes rebound , And echoing Lyres tranfmit the volant Fugue a- round ! } Mean while the fteddy Bark , with profp'rous Gales , Fills the large Sheets of her expanded Sails , And gains th ' intended Port ...
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Poems on Several Occasions: With Some Select Essays in Prose, Volumen1 John Hughes Vista completa - 1735 |
Poems on Several Occasions: With Some Select Essays in Prose, Volumen1 John Hughes Vista completa - 1735 |
Términos y frases comunes
Beauty Behold Belgia beſt bleft Breaft bright Britannia Cæfar Charms cou'd Crouds Defign Defire e'en Elifa ev'ry Eyes fafe faid Fair fame Fate feems felf fhall fhining fhou'd fince fing Fire firft firſt flain Fleche Flow'rs foft fome foon ftill fuch fudden Glory Goddeſs Grace Grove Hand Happineſs happy Harp Heart Heav'n heav'nly himſelf Horace HOUSE OF NASSAU Hughes Illuftrious Immortal infpire juft La Fleche laft lefs Light loft Love Lyre Maid moft moſt Mufe Mufick muft muſt Numbers Nymphs o'er Occafion Paffion Peace Plains pleas'd pleaſe Pleaſure Poem Pothinus Pow'r Praife Praiſe preſent Publick racters raiſe Reaſon reft Reign rife Right Honourable Scene ſeen Senfe ſhall ſhine Skies thee thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thou Thoughts thouſand thro Tranflation Tranfport TRIUMPH OF PEACE Verfe Virtue whofe William wou'd writ
Pasajes populares
Página iii - Fame is the spur that the clear spirit doth raise (That last infirmity of noble mind) To scorn delights, and live laborious days : But the fair guerdon when we hope to find, And think to burst out into sudden blaze, Comes the blind Fury with the abhorred shears And slits the thin-spun life. But not the praise...
Página 260 - For they do not appear to me to have lost the faculty of reasoning, but having joined together some ideas very wrongly, they mistake them for truths; and they err as men do that argue right from wrong principles. For, by the violence of their imaginations, having taken their fancies for realities, they make right deductions from them.
Página 63 - I vow and swear ; But, wet and cold, crave shelter here ; Betray'd by night, and led astray, I've lost, alas ! I've lost my way.
Página 174 - Janus, gave me first to know A mortal's trifling cares below ; My race of life began with thee. Thus far, from great misfortunes free, Contented, I my lot endure, Nor Nature's rigid laws arraign, Nor spurn at common ills in vain, Which folly cannot shun, nor wise reflexion cure.
Página xli - Sword, fire, and all thy ever open gates, That day and night stand ready to receive us. But what's beyond them ? — Who will draw that veil? Yet death's not there — No, 'tis a point of time, The verge 'twixt mortal and immortal beings. It mocks our thoughts! On tins side all is life; And when we have rcach'd it, in that very instant, Tis past the thinking of!
Página xxxix - Your God is one God, there is no God but He, the most merciful.
Página xix - The town is highly obliged to that excellent artist, for having shewn us the Italian music in its perfection, as well as for that generous appro-bation he lately gave to an opera of our own country, in which the composer endeavoured to do justice to the beauty of the words, by following that noble example which has been set him by the greatest foreign masters in that art.
Página 66 - Arms ; At leaft, if that's too much, afford a fpace To meeting Lips, nor fhall we flight the Grace ; We owe .to thee this Freedom to complain, And breathe our Vows, but Vows, alas ! in vain. Thus having faid, when Evening call'd to Reft, The faithful Pair on either fide impreft An intercepted Kifs, then bade Good-night ; But when th...
Página 59 - How fhort has thy mild empire been ! When pregnant Time brought forth this new-born age. At firft we faw thee gently fmile On the young birth, and thy fweet voice awhile...
Página 110 - From hence, when at the court, the park, the play, She gilds the evening, or improves the day, All eyes regard her with tranfporting fire, One...