The Downside magazine and monthly miscellany1844 |
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Page 22
... Thou anxiously then didst watch over me , Didst improve what was right , and correct what was wrong ; Such were the favours imparted by thee ! Alma Mater ! ' Neath thy fostering hand even still do I live ; What prospects of joy before ...
... Thou anxiously then didst watch over me , Didst improve what was right , and correct what was wrong ; Such were the favours imparted by thee ! Alma Mater ! ' Neath thy fostering hand even still do I live ; What prospects of joy before ...
Page 41
... WHILE o'er th ' Egean faithless Paris bore His beauteous hostess to the Trojan shore , The sea - god Nereus lulled the swelling gale , And thus the fates proceeded to unveil . " O treacherous prince , in Helen hast thou found 41.
... WHILE o'er th ' Egean faithless Paris bore His beauteous hostess to the Trojan shore , The sea - god Nereus lulled the swelling gale , And thus the fates proceeded to unveil . " O treacherous prince , in Helen hast thou found 41.
Page 42
... thou escape unscath'd the spears Ever avoided in thy bridal fears . In vain wilt thou escape the shafts acute The Cretans hurl , and Ajax ' swift pursuit . Yet , O adul'trous prince , the day , though late , Will come when thou shalt ...
... thou escape unscath'd the spears Ever avoided in thy bridal fears . In vain wilt thou escape the shafts acute The Cretans hurl , and Ajax ' swift pursuit . Yet , O adul'trous prince , the day , though late , Will come when thou shalt ...
Page 58
... thou reach , my friend Sextius , those plains , Over which gloomy Pluto so silently reigns ! D. LINES ON THE PROSPECT OF O'CONNELL'S IMPRISONMENT . THE dungeon gates will close : immur'd will lie Within , in some lone cell , the Celtic ...
... thou reach , my friend Sextius , those plains , Over which gloomy Pluto so silently reigns ! D. LINES ON THE PROSPECT OF O'CONNELL'S IMPRISONMENT . THE dungeon gates will close : immur'd will lie Within , in some lone cell , the Celtic ...
Page 59
... thou endure , in chains to see , That son , who more than all thy other sons , Hath felt thy woes , and felt for thee such love , As Patriot ne'er before for country felt.- To raise thee from thy wretched , prostrate state , The mighty ...
... thou endure , in chains to see , That son , who more than all thy other sons , Hath felt thy woes , and felt for thee such love , As Patriot ne'er before for country felt.- To raise thee from thy wretched , prostrate state , The mighty ...
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adieu Alma Mater amongst ancient Rome animal appearance band Béarn beautiful beneath blood body bosom Bramber bright called Calypso College commenced contains Continued Count of Portugal death DOWNSIDE MAGAZINE Editor endeavour English equal Euclid express fear feel friends give greater Gregory's hand happy hear heart hills honour hope house of Anjou Hyllus Jaquou Juzet labour land Latin Latin language less live long con look Lysses MAGAZINE AND MONTHLY Magistratus manner Margarido Mathêtês mind Mondred MONTHLY MISCELLANY Moorish mountain nature neath NETTLEBRIDGE never night noble o'er observe ourselves passed peculiar perhaps person pleasure prejudices present pronounce pronunciation proportion quantities Raimondo ratio readers Recared remarks scene side silent soon sorrow soul spirit stood sweet tears Telemachus thee things THOMAS BRANDY thou thought tion vale whilst wish words young youth
Popular passages
Page 140 - The' awaken'd throb for virtue, and for fame ; The sympathies of love, and friendship dear : With all the social offspring of the heart.
Page 117 - In words, as fashions, the same rule will hold; Alike fantastic, if too new, or old: Be not the first by whom the new are tried, Nor yet the last to lay the old aside.
Page 139 - He comes ! he comes ! in every breeze the power Of philosophic melancholy comes ! His near approach the sudden-starting tear. The glowing cheek, the mild dejected air, The soften'd feature, and the beating heart, Pierc'd deep with many a virtuous pang, declare.
Page 4 - LITTLE Jack Horner sat in the corner Eating a Christmas pie; He put in his thumb, and pulled out a plum, And said, "What a good boy am I!
Page 63 - ... tale, — * When he saw the morning mists depart From the summits grey and pale : — For he knew that the fan-palm cast the shade Of its ever-glorious green Where the love of his blasted youth was laid, And the light of her steps had been. Ah ! thus, for ever, the heart looks back To its young hope's funeral urn : — To the tender green of that early track, To its light, let us return ! The lines of our life may be smooth and strong, — And our pleasant path may lie Where the stream of affection...
Page 65 - Qui fit, Maecenas, ut nemo, quam sibi sortem seu ratio dederit seu fors obiecerit, illa contentus vivat, laudet diversa sequentes...
Page 113 - A greater magnitude is said to be a multiple of a less, when the greater is measured by the less, that is, 'when the greater contains the less a certain number of times exactly.' III. Ratio is a mutual relation of two magnitudes of the same kind to one another, in respect of quantity.
Page 154 - From wealthy abbots' chests, and churls' abundant store, What oftentimes he took he shared amongst the poor: No lordly bishop came in lusty Robin's way, To him before he went, but for his pass must pay.
Page 38 - Happy the man, who, studying nature's laws, Through known effects can trace the secret cause — His mind possessing in a quiet state, Fearless of Fortune, and resigned to Fate!
Page 139 - O'er all the soul his sacred influence breathes ! Inflames imagination ; through the breast Infuses every tenderness ; and far Beyond dim earth exalts the swelling thought. Ten thousand thousand fleet ideas, such As never mingled with the vulgar dream, Crowd fast into the mind's creative eye. As fast the correspondent passions rise, As varied and as high : Devotion...