The Works of the English Poets: With Prefaces, Biographical and Critical, Том 38H. Hughs, 1779 |
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... hand Of great Alcinous falls , and stains the fand . To Jove th ' Eternal ( Power above all Powers ! 25 Who wings the winds , and darkens .Heaven with showers ) 30 The flames afcend : till evening they prolong Thy rites , more facred ...
... hand Of great Alcinous falls , and stains the fand . To Jove th ' Eternal ( Power above all Powers ! 25 Who wings the winds , and darkens .Heaven with showers ) 30 The flames afcend : till evening they prolong Thy rites , more facred ...
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... hands ; Then thus : O Queen , farewell ! be still poffeft Of dear remembrance , bleffing ftill and bleft ! Till age and death fhall gently call thee hence ( Sure fate of every mortal excellence ! ) Farewell ! and joys fucceffive ever ...
... hands ; Then thus : O Queen , farewell ! be still poffeft Of dear remembrance , bleffing ftill and bleft ! Till age and death fhall gently call thee hence ( Sure fate of every mortal excellence ! ) Farewell ! and joys fucceffive ever ...
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... hands unfeen the rapid bark restrain ! And yet it fwims , or feems to fwim , the main ! Thus they , unconfcicus of the deed divine : Till great Alcinous rifing own'd the fign . 190 195 Behold the long predeftin'd day ! ( he cries ) Oh ...
... hands unfeen the rapid bark restrain ! And yet it fwims , or feems to fwim , the main ! Thus they , unconfcicus of the deed divine : Till great Alcinous rifing own'd the fign . 190 195 Behold the long predeftin'd day ! ( he cries ) Oh ...
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... hand a shining javelin bore , And painted fandals on her feet she wore . To whom the king : Whoe'er of human race Thou art , that wander'st in this defert place ! With joy to thee , as to fome God , I bend , To thee my treafures and ...
... hand a shining javelin bore , And painted fandals on her feet she wore . To whom the king : Whoe'er of human race Thou art , that wander'st in this defert place ! With joy to thee , as to fome God , I bend , To thee my treafures and ...
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... hand . She anfwer'd In the dreadful day of fight Know , I am with thee , ftrong in all my might . If thou but equal to thyself be found , What gafping numbers then fhall press the ground ! What human victims stain the feaftful floor ...
... hand . She anfwer'd In the dreadful day of fight Know , I am with thee , ftrong in all my might . If thou but equal to thyself be found , What gafping numbers then fhall press the ground ! What human victims stain the feaftful floor ...
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againſt Alcinous Amphinomus Antinous arms Atrides bleffing bleft breaſt caft cauſe coaft Crete cries cry'd death defcends divine dome dreadful Dulichium Eumæus Euryclea Eurymachus Ev'n eyes facred fafe faid faithful fame fate feaft feaſt fecret fhade fhall fhining fhore fhould fide fince fire firſt flain foft fome forrow foul fprings ftand ftill ftranger fuch fuitors fure fwain Goddeſs Gods grace gueft gueſt hafte hand heart Heaven hero Homer Iliad inftant Jove king Laertes laſt loft lord Medon Melanthius muſt native o'er Pallas peers Phemius plac'd pleafing pleaſe praiſe prince Pylos queen rage raiſe reft rejoin'd replies reply'd reſt rife royal ſhade ſhall ſhe ſhore ſkies ſky ſpeak ſpear ſpeed ſpoke ſpread ſtand ſtate ſtay ſtill ſwain taſk tears Telemachus thee thefe Theoclymenus theſe thofe thoſe thou train Ulyffes vafe veffel vengeance whofe whoſe woes wretch youth
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Страница 275 - the latter, where we find not an antiquated, affefted, or uncouth word, for fome hundred lines together; as in his fifth book, the latter part of the eighth, the former of the tenth and eleventh books, and in the narration of Michael in the twelfth. I wonder indeed that he, who ventured (contrary to the
Страница 103 - knew,, and ftrove to meet; In vain he ftrove to crawl, and kifs his feet; Yet (all he could) his tail, his ears, his eyes, Salute his mafter, and confefs his joys. Soft pity touch'd the mighty
Страница 51 - in better days, by Helen wove : Safe in thy mother's care the vefture lay, 14.0 To deck thy bride, and grace thy nuptial day. Meantime may'ft thou with happieft fpeed regain Thy ftately palace, and thy wide domain. She faid, and gave the veil; with grateful look The prince the variegated
Страница 269 - is ufmg a vaft force to lift a feather. I believe, now I am upon this head, it will be found a juft obfervation, That the low aftions of life cannot be put into a figurative ftyle, without being ridiculous ; but things natural can' Metaphors raif'e the latter into dignity, as we fee in the
Страница 258 - on thy immortal brow. Thus when thy draughts, O Raphael! time invades, And the bold figure from the canvas fades, A rival hand recalls from every part Some latent grace, and equals art with art : Tranfported we furvey the dubious ftrife, While each fair image ftarts again to life. How long,
Страница 264 - are ill invented, or ill executed. He affirms it to be nice and particular in painting the manners, but not that thofe manners are ill painted. If Homer has fully in thefe points accomplifhed his own defign, and done all that the nature of his poem demanded or allowed, it
Страница 60 - thou (he cries) haft felt The fpite of fortune too ! her cruel hand 410 Snatch'd thee an infant from thy native land ! Snatch'd from thy parents' arms, thy parents' eyes, To early wants! a man of miferies ! Thy whole fad ftory, from its firft, declare : Sunk the fair city by the rage of war,
Страница 42 - The morn confpicuous on her golden throne. 570 Oh, were my ftrength as then, as then my age! Some friend would fence me from the winter's rage. Yet, tatter'd as I look, I challeng'd then The honours and the offices of men : Some mafter, or fome fervant, would allow 575 A cloak and
Страница 267 - find in each the fame vivacity and fecundity of invention, the fame life and ftrength of imaging and colouring, the particular defcriptions as highly painted, the figures as bold, the metaphors as animated, and the numbers as harmonious, and as various. The Odyfley is a perpetual fource of poetry: the
Страница 284 - we have at leaft none of the blafphemers of Homer. We fteadfaftly and unanimoufly believe, both his poem, and our conftitution, to be the beft that ever human wit invented : that the one is not more incapable of amendment than the other; and (old as they both are) we