Poetry of The Anti-Jacobin [by G. Canning and others].1801 |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 27.
Strana 2
... true poet , of sound principles and sober practice , upon whom we could rely for furnishing us with a handsome quantity of suffi- cient and approved verse - such verse as our Readers might be expected to get by heart , and to sing ; as ...
... true poet , of sound principles and sober practice , upon whom we could rely for furnishing us with a handsome quantity of suffi- cient and approved verse - such verse as our Readers might be expected to get by heart , and to sing ; as ...
Strana 9
... true Jacobin ) , refrains from relieving the object of his compas- sionate contemplation ; as well knowing , that every diminution from the general mass of human misery , must proportionably diminish the force of his argument . This ...
... true Jacobin ) , refrains from relieving the object of his compas- sionate contemplation ; as well knowing , that every diminution from the general mass of human misery , must proportionably diminish the force of his argument . This ...
Strana 14
... prime your guns , And crush the fierce invader ! Whilst every Briton's song shall be , " O give us death - or victory ! " II . Long had this favour'd isle enjoy'd True comforts 14 POETRY OF The Invasion; or, the British War Song -
... prime your guns , And crush the fierce invader ! Whilst every Briton's song shall be , " O give us death - or victory ! " II . Long had this favour'd isle enjoy'd True comforts 14 POETRY OF The Invasion; or, the British War Song -
Strana 15
... True comforts , past expressing , When France her hellish arts employ'd To rob us of each blessing : These from our hearths by force to tear ( Which long we've learn'd to cherish ) Our frantic foes shall vainly dare ; We'll keep ' em ...
... True comforts , past expressing , When France her hellish arts employ'd To rob us of each blessing : These from our hearths by force to tear ( Which long we've learn'd to cherish ) Our frantic foes shall vainly dare ; We'll keep ' em ...
Strana 31
... True to herself , unconquerably bold , The Rights her valour gain'd she dares uphold ; Still with pure faith her promise dares fulfil , Still bows submissive to the Almighty Will.- Just Heav'n ! how Envy kindles at the sight ! How mad ...
... True to herself , unconquerably bold , The Rights her valour gain'd she dares uphold ; Still with pure faith her promise dares fulfil , Still bows submissive to the Almighty Will.- Just Heav'n ! how Envy kindles at the sight ! How mad ...
Časté výrazy a frázy
Abbey All-Fours ANTI-JACOBIN arms atque Author Ballynahinch band Beef Beefington blood brave breast Britain British CANTO Casimere Cecilia charms Chepstow Castle Count Benyowsky Count of Weimar Country's crimes DACTYLICS Didactic Poems Duke e'er England English eyes fair fair Isle fame feelings fire flame France Freedom French FRIEND OF HUMANITY Gallia German Guillotine hand head hear heart HIGGINS hope imitation Isle Jacobin King Knife-grinder Knight Templar land laws Lepaux Liberty Matilda morals Morning Chronicle Muse Muskein niversity of Gottingen Number nymphs o'er patriot Peace poet poetry praise principles Pudd Pudding field Puddingfield quæ rage rapine Readers Rogero round Saint Sapphic savage scene shore Sirmio smile song soul storm sweet tell thee thine Thou think'st amiss translation triumph Trou Troubadour true truth verse virtue Waiter wave Weimar wild Young Pottingen
Populárne pasáže
Strana 234 - No — through the extended globe his feelings run As broad and general as the unbounded sun! 4o No narrow bigot he\ — his reasoned view Thy interests, England, ranks with thine, Peru! France at our doors, he sees no danger nigh, But heaves for Turkey's woes the impartial sigh; A steady Patriot of the World alone, The friend of every country — but his own.
Strana 17 - ... and glad the heart of the poor sufferer. — But no such thing — the Bard very calmly contemplates her situation, which he describes in a pair of very pathetical stanzas; and after the following well-imagined topic of consolation, concludes by leaving her to Providence. Thy husband will never return from the war again ; Cold is thy hopeless heart, even as Charity, Cold are thy famished babes — God kelp thee, widow'd one!
Strana 149 - O navis, referent in mare te novi fluctus ! o quid agis ? fortiter occupa portum ! nonne vides ut nudum remigio latus et malus celeri saucius Africo 5 antennaeque gemant ac sine funibus vix durare carinae possint imperiosius aequor?
Strana 186 - Whene'er with haggard eyes I view This dungeon that I'm rotting in, I think of those companions true Who studied with me at the U — — niversity of Gottingen, — — niversity of Gottingen.
Strana 142 - There oft — returning from those green retreats, Where fair Vauxhallia decks her sylvan seats ; — Where each spruce nymph, from city compters free, Sips the froth'd syllabub, or fragrant tea ; While with sliced ham, scraped beef, and burnt champagne, Her 'prentice lover soothes his amorous pain ; — There oft, in well-trimm'd wherry, glide along Smart beaux and giggling belles, a glittering throng : Smells the tarr'd rope — with undulation fine Flaps the loose sail — the silken awnings shine...
Strana 230 - Sappho's diamonds with her dirty shift, 20 Blunt, Charteris, Hopkins, — meaner subjects fired The keen-eyed Poet ; while the Muse inspired Her ardent child, — entwining, as he sate, His laurell'd chaplet with the thorns of hate.
Strana 96 - God prosper long our noble king, Our lives and safeties all ; A woeful hunting once there did In Chevy Chase befall...
Strana 3 - She scream'd for fresh geneva. Not to her Did the blithe fields of Tothill, or thy street, St. Giles, its fair varieties expand, Till at the last, in slow-drawn cart, she went To execution. Dost thou ask her crime ? SHE WHIPP'D TWO FEMALE PRENTICES TO DEATH, AND HID THEM IN THE COAL-HOLE; for her mind Shaped strictest plans of discipline.
Strana 190 - Stella," a German (or professedly a German) piece now much in vogue, from which, also, the catastrophe of Mr. Higgins's play is in part borrowed, so far as relates to the agreement to which the ladies come, as the reader will see by and by, to share Casimere between them. The dinner scene is copied partly from the published translation of the " Stranger," and partly from the first scene of
Strana 246 - Couriers and Stars, sedition's evening host, "Thou Morning Chronicle and Morning Post, "Whether ye make the Rights of Man your theme, "Your country libel, and your God blaspheme, "Or dirt on private worth and virtue throw, "Still, blasphemous or blackguard, praise Lepaux! "And ye five other wandering bards that move "In sweet accord of harmony and love, "Coleridge and Southey, Lloyd and Lamb, and Co. "Tune all your mystic harps to praise Lepaux!