PoemsHansard, 1810 - 134 páginas |
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Resultados 1-5 de 19
Página 3
... fair entreaties may the King persuade ; " But if , on force presuming , he defies " Our embassy , nor yields the golden prize , 66 Taught by himself we then to force repair ; " Yet this , O Comrades , be our latest care : " Mild words ...
... fair entreaties may the King persuade ; " But if , on force presuming , he defies " Our embassy , nor yields the golden prize , 66 Taught by himself we then to force repair ; " Yet this , O Comrades , be our latest care : " Mild words ...
Página 6
... fair Asterode's embrace , Heta's son , ere yet the King had led The chaste Idy'a to his nuptial bed : In form above the Colchian youth he shone , Grac'd with th ' illustrious name of Phaeton . Medea and Calciope the rest Of the grand ...
... fair Asterode's embrace , Heta's son , ere yet the King had led The chaste Idy'a to his nuptial bed : In form above the Colchian youth he shone , Grac'd with th ' illustrious name of Phaeton . Medea and Calciope the rest Of the grand ...
Página 7
... fair attendants to the Virgin's aid , Their webs neglected at their feet were laid . With joy the Parent rais'd her greeting hand , Her sons descried amidst the youthful band ; They with like joy to her embraces ran , When plaintive ...
... fair attendants to the Virgin's aid , Their webs neglected at their feet were laid . With joy the Parent rais'd her greeting hand , Her sons descried amidst the youthful band ; They with like joy to her embraces ran , When plaintive ...
Página 30
... fair Achaian dame ! " Mine be my Parent's house and virgin fame ! - " But if this stubborn purpose I forego , 66 My Sister's counsels might relieve my woe . “ If , ever anxious for her offspring's fate , " She dreads the perils that ...
... fair Achaian dame ! " Mine be my Parent's house and virgin fame ! - " But if this stubborn purpose I forego , 66 My Sister's counsels might relieve my woe . “ If , ever anxious for her offspring's fate , " She dreads the perils that ...
Página 31
... To mark the wild disorders of her breast . She to Calciope the tale unfolds , Who with her Sons a secret council holds , How How best their fair entreaties may persuade The Colchian Nymph BOOK II . ] 31 MEDEA AND JASON .
... To mark the wild disorders of her breast . She to Calciope the tale unfolds , Who with her Sons a secret council holds , How How best their fair entreaties may persuade The Colchian Nymph BOOK II . ] 31 MEDEA AND JASON .
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Términos y frases comunes
Æeta Æeta's anguish Apollonius Apollonius Rhodius Argonauts Argus arms Athamas Augeas band bark beam beneath Boeotia bosom breast bright Calciope Castor and Pollux charms cheeks Chief Colchian Maid Colchis comrades counsel Crew dart daughter dire dome earth Eeta ev'ry eyes fame Fancy Fancy's fate fear Fear strikes fierce fire fix'd flames flow foes Friend glows Goddess Golden Fleece Grecian Greece grief guest hand heart Heav'n Hecat Hence herbs Heroes honour'd host join'd Jove King land Lest Luke Hansard magic MEDEA AND JASON mighty Connal mind Mopsus mountain's native Nymph o'er o'er the plain Orchomenus pangs Parent's Pelias Phineus Phrixus Phrontis plac'd Poem pow'rs pray'r race rage rais'd realms rise sacred Sarmatians scene secret shore Sire sleep soft Sons sorrows soul Straight task tears Telamon tender thee thine thou toil tow'ring train urg'd Virgin Virgin train warlike wild Youth
Pasajes populares
Página vi - Knight of the most ancient and most noble Order of the Thistle...
Página 100 - Exhausted by her painful throes/ Let Nature take her due repose : Sweet, dearest Anna, be thy sleep, .. . While I my joyful vigils keep ! , . '. , Oh t be thy joys sincere As mine ' For sure my pangs have equall'd thine.
Página 101 - Heaven for all the danger past, Heaven for no trivial cause ordains, That joy like this succeeds thy pains, But by this sacred pledge demands A parent's duty at thy hands; While thou thy infant charge shalt rear, My love shall lighten every care.
Página 100 - EXHAUSTED by her painful throes, Let Nature take her due repose ; Sweet, dearest Anna, be thy sleep, While I my joyful vigils keep ! O ! be thy joy sincere as mine, For sure my pangs have equall'd thine \ Sleep on — and, waking, thou shalt see All that may sooth thy pains, in me — Friend, Husband, and (O name most dear) The Father of thy new-born care.
Página 118 - Ah si vous pouviez comprendre Ce que je ressens pour vous ; L'amour n'a rien de si tendre, Ni l'amitié de si doux.
Página 102 - In her may I those manners see, Those virtues, I adore in Thee. TO THO ORDE, ESQ, (afterwards Lord BOLTON,) IN RETURN FOE HIS "SKETCH OF A FAMILY.
Página v - The Loves of Medea and Jason," a poem, in three books, translated from the Greek of Apollonius Rhodius Argonauticus.
Página 100 - When what was his, shall be no longer thine, May'st thou, like him, life's last sad load sustain, With mind unshaken in the hour of pain ! Death's call, like him, undaunted may'st thou hear, And want no Son to mourn thy sacred bier ! To His WIFE, ON THE BIRTH OF HER FIRST CHILD.
Página 98 - Barton's rural seat With sweet Contentment fix your calm retreat ; In the late Pastor's honour'd steps you tread, And lead the Flock which once my Father led : While we, forsakers of our native plain, One aged Parent's feeble steps sustain ; Content, tho' sad, if yet our pious care Might mitigate the loss we can't repair!
Página 88 - Mark how in dreams, whate'er the Fancy's theme, Love, rage or fear, are still in the extreme : Joy, too, by sleep exalted and...