Retrospective Review, Volume 3C. and H. Baldwyn, 1820 |
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Page 13
... hearts . chap . 57 . The following chapter has always appeared to us pe- culiarly interesting , for the beauty and truth of the moral feeling , and for its expressing strongly those emotions which we may suppose to have influenced the ...
... hearts . chap . 57 . The following chapter has always appeared to us pe- culiarly interesting , for the beauty and truth of the moral feeling , and for its expressing strongly those emotions which we may suppose to have influenced the ...
Page 17
... heart , than the history of Joseph , as there narrated ? -the same facts are told in the twelfth chapter of the Koran , without one spark of feeling , one symptom that the plagiarist was at all sensible of the beauty of his original ...
... heart , than the history of Joseph , as there narrated ? -the same facts are told in the twelfth chapter of the Koran , without one spark of feeling , one symptom that the plagiarist was at all sensible of the beauty of his original ...
Page 34
... hearts of our ancestors ; the name of Saracen had not ceased to be hateful to their ears , and the Sepulchre of the holy City was still a shrine and a temple . It is true , that the Reformation had cut off all hopes of rearing the ...
... hearts of our ancestors ; the name of Saracen had not ceased to be hateful to their ears , and the Sepulchre of the holy City was still a shrine and a temple . It is true , that the Reformation had cut off all hopes of rearing the ...
Page 37
... hearts ; So we , if children young diseas'd we finde , Annoint with sweets the vessels ' foremost parts , To make them taste the potion sharpe we give , They drinke deceiv'd , and so deceiv'd they live . " We cannot forbear giving the ...
... hearts ; So we , if children young diseas'd we finde , Annoint with sweets the vessels ' foremost parts , To make them taste the potion sharpe we give , They drinke deceiv'd , and so deceiv'd they live . " We cannot forbear giving the ...
Page 41
... heart feels in a panting plight , Through so long use you may to me declare Ech Christen , though in armes they closed are . What then is he that doth so seemely frame Himselfe to just , and so fierce semblance beare ? Unto the ladie ...
... heart feels in a panting plight , Through so long use you may to me declare Ech Christen , though in armes they closed are . What then is he that doth so seemely frame Himselfe to just , and so fierce semblance beare ? Unto the ladie ...
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admiration Æsop appears Archilaus beauty behold body breath Carew character Christian death delight devil Diog divine doth earth Egypt Egyptian extracts eyes fable face faire Fairefax fear feelings French Frier Gabriel Harvey Ganelon George Peele give gold Greek hand hast hath head heart heaven Henry Vaughan holy honour horse Hudibras Hudibrastic humour Iliad imitation John Lilly king Koran language learning living Lord Mahomet master mind moneye monks nature never night noble Novum Organum observation original Orlando Pallas passions paye Pelop Persian Pilpay play poem poet poetry present princes Queen readers sacred says scene scholars seems Sethos shew soul Spain speak spirit stanza sweet sword Tasso tell thee thing thou thought tion tongue translation truth unto verse Welch mountains whole words writers Ziph