The Poetical Works of Matthew Prior, Volume 1Bell and Daldy, 1866 |
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Página xx
... thought also to have been the author of a very satirical attack on the Duke of Marlborough , called the Widow and her Cat , which concludes with the following stanza : So glaring is thy insolence , So vile thy breach of trust is , That ...
... thought also to have been the author of a very satirical attack on the Duke of Marlborough , called the Widow and her Cat , which concludes with the following stanza : So glaring is thy insolence , So vile thy breach of trust is , That ...
Página xxxi
... thought a good Englishman , than the best poet , or greatest scholar , that ever wrote . " Matt . Prior . 3 " The days are now long enough to walk in the park after dinner , and so I do whenever it is fair . This walking is a strange ...
... thought a good Englishman , than the best poet , or greatest scholar , that ever wrote . " Matt . Prior . 3 " The days are now long enough to walk in the park after dinner , and so I do whenever it is fair . This walking is a strange ...
Página xxxvi
... thought the taste of Prior would have rejected . Abra is going to give a dinner to Solomon . Abra invites the nation is the guest : To have the honour of each day sustain'd , The woods are traversed , and the lakes are drain'd ...
... thought the taste of Prior would have rejected . Abra is going to give a dinner to Solomon . Abra invites the nation is the guest : To have the honour of each day sustain'd , The woods are traversed , and the lakes are drain'd ...
Página xxxvii
... thought and in the unaffected clearness of its language , which flows on with perfect ease , as if totally unembarrassed by the restraints of rhyme ; 1 Mr. Pope said that the Alma of Prior was the only work that , abating its excessive ...
... thought and in the unaffected clearness of its language , which flows on with perfect ease , as if totally unembarrassed by the restraints of rhyme ; 1 Mr. Pope said that the Alma of Prior was the only work that , abating its excessive ...
Página xliv
... thought much better than several things he himself published . In particular , I remember there was a dialogue of about two hundred verses , between Apollo and Daphne , which pleased me as much as anything of his I ever read . There are ...
... thought much better than several things he himself published . In particular , I remember there was a dialogue of about two hundred verses , between Apollo and Daphne , which pleased me as much as anything of his I ever read . There are ...
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Termos e frases comuns
arms banyshed battle of Landen beauteous beauty Belgia bless blest Boileau Bolingbroke bosom breast breath Britain charms Cloe Cloe's command cried crown'd Cupid darts dear death delight Derry dread Duke e'er Earl of Dorset earth Emma Emma's eyes fair fame fate favour fear fight flame France Gallic Ganymede George Rooke glorious glory goddess grace grene wode go grief hand happy hast heart Heaven Henry hero honour Jove king lady live Lord Lord Bolingbroke mankynde I love Marlborough master sword MATTHEW PRIOR Muse mynde Namur ne'er never night numbers Nut-brown Maid nymph o'er pain peace poem poet praise prince queen rage reign rove Sambre sav'd sighs sing smiles soft song sorrow tell thee things thou thought Torcy triumph Venus verse vex'd virtue vows weep William wound wretched write wyll youth
Passagens mais conhecidas
Página 109 - tis his fancy to run. At night he declines on his Thetis's breast. So when I am wearied with wandering all day, To thee, my delight, in the evening I come; No matter what beauties I saw in my way, They were but my visits, but thou art my home.
Página 104 - Ah me ! the blooming pride of May And that of Beauty are but one : At morn both flourish, bright and gay, Both fade at evening, pale and gone.
Página 172 - Dear Thomas, did'st thou never pop Thy head into a tin-man's shop? There, Thomas, did'st thou never see ('Tis but by way of Simile !) A squirrel spend his little rage, In jumping round a rolling cage ? The cage, as either side...
Página 180 - I am the knyght ; I come by nyght, As secret as I can ; Sayinge, Alas ! thus standeth the case, I am a banyshed man.
Página 40 - In vain you tell your parting lover, You wish fair winds may waft him over. Alas! what winds can happy prove, That bear me far from what I love? Alas ! what dangers on the main Can equal those that I sustain, From slighted vows, and cold disdain?
Página 204 - Did I but purpose to embark with thee On the smooth surface of a summer's sea ; While gentle zephyrs play in prosperous gales, And fortune's favour fills the swelling sails ; 3»» But would forsake the ship, and make the shore, When the winds whistle, and the tempests roar...
Página 103 - explain This change of humour : pry'thee tell : That falling tear — what does it mean ?" She sigh'd : she smiled : and to the flowers Pointing, the lovely moralist said : " See ! friend, in some few fleeting hours, See yonder, what a change is made. " Ah me, the blooming pride of May, And that of Beauty are but one ; At morn both flourish bright and gay, Both fade at evening, pale, and gone.
Página 133 - Whate'er thy countrymen have done, By law and wit, by sword and gun, In thee is faithfully recited ; And all the living world that view Thy work, give thee the praises due, At once instructed and delighted. ' " Yet for the fame of all these deeds, What beggar in the Invalides, With lameness broke, with blindness smitten, Wished ever decently to die, To have been either Mezeray, Or any monarch he has written?
Página 240 - ... rolling threescore years and one Did round this globe their courses run, If human things went ill or well, If changing empires rose or fell, The morning past, the evening came, And found this couple still the same. They...
Página 44 - Our anxious pains we, all the day, In search of what we like, employ : Scorning at night the worthless prey, We find the labour gave the joy.