Select Miscellaneous Productions, of Mrs. Day, and Thomas Day, Esq., in Verse and Prose: Also, Some Detached Pieces of PoetryT. Jones, 1805 - 255 pages |
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Page 1
... charms pourtray , Which Matlock's variegated scenes display ; Where gliding through her rich romantic vale , The Derwent circulates her healthful gale , Gently meanders by the rocks above , Bathing their feet in token of his love , Or ...
... charms pourtray , Which Matlock's variegated scenes display ; Where gliding through her rich romantic vale , The Derwent circulates her healthful gale , Gently meanders by the rocks above , Bathing their feet in token of his love , Or ...
Page 9
... charms , Her heav'nly nectar sip ; Yet nobler 1 , am barr'd the pow'r , To touch sweet Delia's lip . Then why should man behold with scorn ! The happier insect race ? When even flies may dare to do , What human forms disgrace . Oh that ...
... charms , Her heav'nly nectar sip ; Yet nobler 1 , am barr'd the pow'r , To touch sweet Delia's lip . Then why should man behold with scorn ! The happier insect race ? When even flies may dare to do , What human forms disgrace . Oh that ...
Page 11
... charms , Her heav'nly nectar sip ; Yet nobler 1 , am barr'd the pow'r , To touch sweet Delia's lip . Then why should man behold with scorn ! The happier insect race ? When even flies may dare to do , What human forms disgrace . Oh that ...
... charms , Her heav'nly nectar sip ; Yet nobler 1 , am barr'd the pow'r , To touch sweet Delia's lip . Then why should man behold with scorn ! The happier insect race ? When even flies may dare to do , What human forms disgrace . Oh that ...
Page 14
... charm , That time may transmit to the future race , What e'en on canvas , will the bosom warm . How Nature once , in sportive frolic hour , The Graces call'd around her magic seat , And these besought , to deck with fairest flow'r , And ...
... charm , That time may transmit to the future race , What e'en on canvas , will the bosom warm . How Nature once , in sportive frolic hour , The Graces call'd around her magic seat , And these besought , to deck with fairest flow'r , And ...
Page 17
... charm , ) Wearied he sleeps midst ev'ry shiv'ring blast , Senseless of fears , the watchful breast alarm . Why o'er a boy thus cradled in the shroud , Thy magic influence so kindly shed , And not o'er those of high distinction proud ...
... charm , ) Wearied he sleeps midst ev'ry shiv'ring blast , Senseless of fears , the watchful breast alarm . Why o'er a boy thus cradled in the shroud , Thy magic influence so kindly shed , And not o'er those of high distinction proud ...
Other editions - View all
Select Miscellaneous Productions of Mrs. Day, and Thomas Day, Esq. in Verse ... Esther Milnes Day No preview available - 2017 |
SELECT MISC PROD OF MRS DAY & Thomas 1748-1789 Day,Esther Milnes D. 1792 Day,Thomas B. 1766? Lowndes No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
admire adorn amiable Apollo appear ardent beauties benevolence bestow bless blest bloom bosom breast bright Britons Camillus Caroline CHARACTER CHARACTER CHARACTER OF MISS charms Cotillion Day's poetry dear death Delia delight divine dread drest e'er elegant epitaph ev'ry fair faithful fantastick fav'rite fear feel female finer feelings flow flow'r fond friendship Gauls gen'rous gentle genuine glow grace happiness heart heav'nly Heaven Her's HORATIUS COCLES human humble immortal inspire Jane Shore lady Liberty Lord mankind ments meration mind Minerva Miss Milnes moral Muse nature ne'er never noble numbers o'er pains passions piety pleasing pleasure poison'd pow'r praise principles Prose racter sacred shew shine shrub smiles soft soul species sure sweet sweetly taste tender thee THOMAS DAY THOMAS LOWNDES thou thro Tristram Shandy truth Tun'd tyrant uncon VERSES virtue virtuous warm Whilst wisdom written youth
Popular passages
Page 202 - But happy they, the happiest of their kind, Whom gentler stars unite, and in one fate Their hearts, their fortunes, and their beings blend ! 'Tis not the coarser tie of human laws, Unnatural oft, and foreign to the mind, That binds their peace, but harmony itself, Attuning all their passions into love ; Where friendship...
Page xviii - Full many a gem of purest ray serene The dark unfathom'd caves of ocean bear: Full many a flower is born to blush unseen, And waste its sweetness on the desert air. Some village Hampden that with dauntless breast The little tyrant of his fields withstood, Some mute inglorious Milton here may rest, Some Cromwell guiltless of his country's blood. Th...
Page 5 - And own myself a man; to see our senators Cheat the deluded people with a show Of liberty, which yet they ne'er must taste of; They say by them our hands are free from fetters, Yet whom they please they lay in basest bonds...
Page 196 - Celestial Happiness, whene'er she stoops To visit earth, one shrine the goddess finds, And one alone, to make her sweet amends For absent heaven the bosom of a friend ; Where heart meets heart, reciprocally soft, Each other's pillow to repose divine.
Page 48 - Whose charms, on this sequester'd shore, With love can fire a stranger's breast; A breast that never loved before ! O tell me, in what silent vale, To hail the balmy breath of May, Thy tresses floating on the gale, All simply neat thou deign'st to stray! Not such thy look, not such thy air, Not such thy unaffected grace, As, mid the town's deceitful glare, Marks the proud nymph's disdainful face.
Page 1 - With her the kindred powers of harmony, The deep recesses of the grove shall trace, And hang with flowers each consecrated tree. Blithe Fancy too shall spread her glittering plumes, She loves the white cliffs of Britannia's isle, She loves the spot where infant Genius blooms, She loves the spot where Peace and Freedom smile.
Page 48 - Marks the proud nymph's disdainful face. Health's rosy bloom upon thy cheek, Eyes that with artless lustre roll, More eloquent than words to speak The genuine feelings of the soul. Such be thy form! thy noble mind By no false culture led astray ; By native sense alone refined In reason's plain and simple way. Indifferent if the eye of Fame Thy merit unobserving see; And heedless of the praise or blame Of all mankind, of all but me.