The sea shore, with other poemsHitchins, 1810 - 175 Seiten |
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Seite 45
... All hearts are open ! Tho ' the world may deem This plaintive strain a murmur ' gainst Thy will , Thou know'st I bow , with resignation fix'd , To time's vicissitudes . The wretch that views The various THE SEA SHORE . 45.
... All hearts are open ! Tho ' the world may deem This plaintive strain a murmur ' gainst Thy will , Thou know'st I bow , with resignation fix'd , To time's vicissitudes . The wretch that views The various THE SEA SHORE . 45.
Seite 46
Fortescue Hitchins. To time's vicissitudes . The wretch that views The various changes incident to man— Riches and poverty , repose and toil , Rul'd by a wonder - working Providence , — To view them thus , and not to feel the force Of ...
Fortescue Hitchins. To time's vicissitudes . The wretch that views The various changes incident to man— Riches and poverty , repose and toil , Rul'd by a wonder - working Providence , — To view them thus , and not to feel the force Of ...
Seite 55
... wretch unmov'd by pity's tear , Is not a friend of mine ; And him , tho ' other ties endear , I scornfully resign ; For minds to kind compassion given , Esteem it as a gift from Heaven . The child , by reason yet untaught , Knows not ...
... wretch unmov'd by pity's tear , Is not a friend of mine ; And him , tho ' other ties endear , I scornfully resign ; For minds to kind compassion given , Esteem it as a gift from Heaven . The child , by reason yet untaught , Knows not ...
Seite 79
... wretch that stoops to vice ; Think not , sweet boy ! ( if such thy pow'r In childhood's unenlighten'd hour , But Ere reason's noontide blaze displays The crowded path where MISCELLANEOUS PIECES . 79 Ode to Master Griffeth Cole,
... wretch that stoops to vice ; Think not , sweet boy ! ( if such thy pow'r In childhood's unenlighten'd hour , But Ere reason's noontide blaze displays The crowded path where MISCELLANEOUS PIECES . 79 Ode to Master Griffeth Cole,
Seite 102
... wretch " go whistle . " Deep in the agony of grief , When every hope forsook him , Resolving to obtain relief , He to a pond betook him . And in he bounc'd and flounc'd about , Like whale in shallow water , But found that drowning ...
... wretch " go whistle . " Deep in the agony of grief , When every hope forsook him , Resolving to obtain relief , He to a pond betook him . And in he bounc'd and flounc'd about , Like whale in shallow water , But found that drowning ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Adieu balmy morn beauteous beauty beauty's Beneath blast bless'd bliss bloom blossoms bosom breast breath bright Camborne charms chear copies Cornwall Crowan cry'd dark dear death deep delight despair Ditto divine drooping E'en earth Ellen ev'ry fair Falmouth Farewell fate fierce flow'r fond friends FROGS gloom grief heart Heav'n Helston Hichens Hitchins Hocken hope impart Ives John Laura Lelant Liskeard Lord De Dunstanville lov'd Marazion Miss Miss Elizabeth MONDEGO mournful muse nature's ne'er night numbers nymph o'er pass'd peace Penzance pleasure Plymouth-yard poor Portreath pow'r Redruth repose Rosewarne scenes shades shed SHERBORNE shore sighs skies smile soft solicitor song soon sorrow soul sportive strain stretch'd sweet swift tear thee thine Thomas thou thought thro tide TREGENNA CASTLE trembling Truro Twas Urg'd vale virtue waves Whilst William wings wint'ry woes wretch youth zephyrs
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 153 - THESE, as they change, ALMIGHTY FATHER, these Are but the varied God. The rolling year Is full of THEE. Forth in the pleasing Spring THY beauty walks, THY tenderness and love. Wide flush the fields ; the softening air is balm ; Echo the mountains round ; the forest smiles ; And every sense, and every heart is joy. Then comes THY glory in the Summer months, With light and heat refulgent. Then THY sun...
Seite 47 - I see the right, and I approve it too ; Condemn the wrong, and yet the wrong pursue.
Seite 128 - Clarke, wrote of this factor : — "Tis vain for present fame to wish. Our persons first must be forgotten; For poets are like stinking fish, They never shine until they're rotten.
Seite 64 - Voracious worms, in busy volumes, range. Her dull, cold ear no more her Derwin heeds, No more her heart with kindred sorrow bleeds; Clos'd are those eyes that beam'd so bright before, To weep at Derwin's misery no more. Lo ! the wild youth his sad existence spurns, And o'er her grave, in suppliant sorrow, mourns ; From morn's first blush, 'till night's cimmerian reign, He sighs and weeps — but weeps and sighs in rain. Tho' oft around him sheeted spectres glide, Still droops he there, still flows...
Seite 35 - To stray in dark delusion. Such there are Who, madly trusting to its idle dreams, Would doubt th* existence of a pow'r divine, And shut out immortality from man. No ! tho...
Seite 62 - I) those matchless graces mine ? * As on thy form I bend my ardent eye, " Hope lights afresh the glowing torch of joy ; ** Then tell me, Mora ! tell me, ere we part, * When wilt thou calm the throbbings of my...
Seite 61 - O'er her lov'd form rich auburn tresses hung. And melting music dwelt upon her tongue. . , Her blushing cheeks the rose of health possess'd, And snowy whiteness grac'd her virgin breast ; Her virgin breast — more sweet than blossom'd spring. Mote soft than down that plumes the cygnet's wing. To climb the steep Tregare ; and, from its height, Transported, view th...
Seite 72 - With such base stigmas marks his name, " And, careless of a future state, . . • " Thus trifles with the shafts of fate. '. " But see, my friend ! the wine is out ! ." You'll wet the other eye, no doubt. " We well may sit a little later, " So bring another bottle, waiter...
Seite 37 - ... urbanity of his manners, his friendly disposition, his candour, and modest deportment, contribute not less to the comforts of private lift, ilimi bit pliilo.iophical researches to the public instruction and entertainment.
Seite 61 - DERWIN and MORA. [From the Ancient Cornish.] Derwin, the bold, awakes my plaintive song, Derwin from Goran's brave descendants sprung ; Like some brown mountain oak, that crowns the height, The stately, warrior aw'd th' astonish 'd sight, Whilst his big heart the shafts of fear withstood.