Poems: English, Latin, and Greek |
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Page lxi
... Thou water turn'dst to wine , ( faire friend of life ; ) Two divells at one blow thou ha'st laid flatt ; Thou trim'st a Prophets tombe , & do'st bequeath Rich Laz'arus ! richer in those gemmes , those teares , How life , & death in thee ...
... Thou water turn'dst to wine , ( faire friend of life ; ) Two divells at one blow thou ha'st laid flatt ; Thou trim'st a Prophets tombe , & do'st bequeath Rich Laz'arus ! richer in those gemmes , those teares , How life , & death in thee ...
Page lxxv
... Thou spak'st the word , ( thy word's a Law , ) Midst all the darke and knotty snares O mighty Nothing ! unto thee . Thou Water turn'st to Wine ; ( fayre friend of Life ) How Life an Death in thee 87 102 87 89 88 88 89 89 90 185 91 92 91 ...
... Thou spak'st the word , ( thy word's a Law , ) Midst all the darke and knotty snares O mighty Nothing ! unto thee . Thou Water turn'st to Wine ; ( fayre friend of Life ) How Life an Death in thee 87 102 87 89 88 88 89 89 90 185 91 92 91 ...
Page 177
... Thou by thy selfe maist sit , ( blest Isle ) and see How thy Great Mother Nature doats on thee : Thee therefore from the rest apart she hurl'd , And seem'd to make an Isle , but made a world . 20 Great Charles ! thou sweet Dawne of a ...
... Thou by thy selfe maist sit , ( blest Isle ) and see How thy Great Mother Nature doats on thee : Thee therefore from the rest apart she hurl'd , And seem'd to make an Isle , but made a world . 20 Great Charles ! thou sweet Dawne of a ...
Contents
A Early Printed Editions | xliii |
EPIGRAMMATUM SACRORUM LIBER | lii |
CARMEN DEO NOSTRO | lxxxi |
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Common terms and phrases
Aeneid amor atque Bensly blest brest bright Cambridge Christe Christopher Rouse Compare Countess of Denbigh cùm dare death Deus dicere Domini doth e're Ecce edition Elegy enim Epig epigram Epitaph erat Ergò erit eyes faire flaming foot-notes fuit giue habet hæc hand hast hath haue Heading heart heaven hîc hinc Hymn ignes illa ille illi Inque ipsa ipse Joseph Beaumont kisse lacrymas Latin leaue lett liue Lord loue Love lyes magis malè manus mihi modò Muses Musicks neque Nicholas Ferrar nunc oculis Peterhouse poem pretious puer quæ quàm quid quis quòd quoque Richard Crashaw satis scilicet selfe shee sibi sinus soule starres Sunne sunt suum sweet tamen teares thee thine thou tibi tuis Tunc tuus ultrà unda verses Virgin vitæ Vpon weepe wings ΙΟ
References to this book
The Language of Natural Description in Eighteenth-century Poetry John Arthos No preview available - 1949 |