The Metrical Miscellany: Consisting Chiefly of Poems Hitherto UnpublishedMaria Riddell |
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Page xiv
... blest , if These can charm , The heart to gentle Friendship prone , Who feels with int'rest prompt and warm The praise of others — as its own . THE EDITOR . THE METRICAL MISCELLANY . IMITATION OF THE IDYLLIUM OF MOSCHUS xiv.
... blest , if These can charm , The heart to gentle Friendship prone , Who feels with int'rest prompt and warm The praise of others — as its own . THE EDITOR . THE METRICAL MISCELLANY . IMITATION OF THE IDYLLIUM OF MOSCHUS xiv.
Page 1
... gentle BION dead . Ye Flow'rs no more perfume the vernal gale , Ye Vi'lets wither , Roses turn to pale ; And thou , sweet Hyacinth , whose letter'd leaf So long has worn the bloody marks of grief , B With more than wonted sadness ...
... gentle BION dead . Ye Flow'rs no more perfume the vernal gale , Ye Vi'lets wither , Roses turn to pale ; And thou , sweet Hyacinth , whose letter'd leaf So long has worn the bloody marks of grief , B With more than wonted sadness ...
Page 4
... gentle Cerylus so sore distrest ; Or , round his sad sepulchre in the vale , Did Memnon's bird his master's fate bewail ; As did ye all , on this unhappy shore , Young Bron's hapless , timeless death deplore . Sicilian Muse , begin the ...
... gentle Cerylus so sore distrest ; Or , round his sad sepulchre in the vale , Did Memnon's bird his master's fate bewail ; As did ye all , on this unhappy shore , Young Bron's hapless , timeless death deplore . Sicilian Muse , begin the ...
Page 7
... gentle poet more ; Nor were so many hearts for Sappho wrung , ― Sappho , whose fate thyself so sweetly sung . Not wholly skill - less of the past'ral strains By thee so sweetly taught thy native plains , For thee I strive to raise the ...
... gentle poet more ; Nor were so many hearts for Sappho wrung , ― Sappho , whose fate thyself so sweetly sung . Not wholly skill - less of the past'ral strains By thee so sweetly taught thy native plains , For thee I strive to raise the ...
Page 17
... gently rocking on the rising tide , A ship's unwonted form was seen to ride ; -'s that subject is • " The Emigrant " is the only poem of Mr. E- was ever before published . This Eclogue , as the well known to have been by no means ...
... gently rocking on the rising tide , A ship's unwonted form was seen to ride ; -'s that subject is • " The Emigrant " is the only poem of Mr. E- was ever before published . This Eclogue , as the well known to have been by no means ...
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The Metrical Miscellany: Consisting Chiefly of Poems Hitherto Unpublished Maria Riddell No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
anguish avenging Eagle beam beauty begin the song beneath blest bliss blushing bosom cold bow'r breast breath bright brow burning bed charms cheek cherub climes dear Death deck drest e'er Eclogue Ev'n fair Fancy Farewell fate flow'r fond friendship gale gaze Gêlert gentle gloom glow grace grave grief grove hail hand hear heart Heav'n heave HENRY FUSELI hope hour joys life's light lov'd Love's lyre Maid with bosom Mary's tomb mind morn mournful measure flow Nature's ne'er night numbers o'er Old Matlock pale passion peace plain poison'd pow'r rapture rill rise rocks round Sappho scenes shade Sicilian Muse sigh silent sleep smiles soft song of woe soothe sorrows soul strains in mournful stream sweet swell tear TEMPLE OF FRIENDSHIP tender thee thine thou thro throbbing tomb trembling tuneful vale wake wave weep whilst wild youth
Popular passages
Page 237 - Ah, what was then Llewellyn's pain ! For now the truth was clear ; The gallant hound the wolf had slain To save Llewellyn's heir. Vain, vain was all Llewellyn's woe : " Best of thy kind, adieu ! The frantic blow that laid thee low This heart shall ever rue...
Page 236 - And on went Gelert too; And still, where'er his eyes he cast, Fresh blood-gouts shocked his view.
Page 235 - Oh, where does faithful Gelert roam ? the flower of all his race ! so true, so brave ! a lamb at home — a lion in the chase!
Page 235 - In sooth, he was a peerless hound, the gift of royal John ; but now no Gelert could be found, and all the chase rode on. And now, as over rocks and dells the gallant chidings rise, all Snowdon's craggy chaos yells with many mingled cries.
Page 115 - Hail, blushing goddess, beauteous Spring, Who in thy jocund train dost bring Loves and Graces, smiling hours, Balmy breezes, fragrant flowers, Come, with tints of roseate hue, Nature's faded charms renew. " Yet why should I thy presence hail? To me no more the breathing gale Comes fraught with...
Page 238 - Best of thy kind, adieu ! The frantic deed which laid thee low, This heart shall ever rue.
Page 176 - ANNE'S HILL. BY THE RIGHT HON. p. FITZPATFaCK. THE STAR, whose radiant beams adorn With vivid light the rising morn, The season changed — with milder ray Cheers the calm hour of parting day. So FRIENDSHIP, of the generous breast The earliest, and the latest guest, In youthful prime with ardour glows, And sweetens life's serener close.
Page 134 - For thoughts may past delights recall, And parted lovers meet again. I weep not for the silent dead: Their toils are past, their sorrows o'er; And those they loved their steps shall tread, And death shall join to part no more.
Page 236 - O'erturned his infant's bed he found, With blood-stained covert rent ; And all around, the walls and ground With recent blood besprent. He called his child — no voice replied — He searched, with terror wild ; Blood, blood he found on every side, But nowhere found his child. " Hell-hound ! my child's by thee devoured," The frantic father cried ; And to the hilt his vengeful sword He plunged in Gelert's side.
Page 73 - And hail the chapel! hail the platform wild Where Tell directed the avenging dart, With well-strung arm, that first preserved his child, Then aimed the arrow at the tyrant's heart.