Poems ..., Volum 1W. Collins, 1834 - 564 sider |
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Side ix
... sight of their contemporaries . But this is digression . After Cowper had fulfilled his clerkship , he en- tered upon those studies which were to qualify him The Task . X for a barrister , with about as much intensity A 3 ix.
... sight of their contemporaries . But this is digression . After Cowper had fulfilled his clerkship , he en- tered upon those studies which were to qualify him The Task . X for a barrister , with about as much intensity A 3 ix.
Side xix
... sight . " The Lord will happiness divine On contrite hearts bestow , " & c . " My God , how perfect are thy ways , " & c . " The Saviour hides his face , " & c . " Lord , who hast suffered all for me , " & c . " As birds their infant ...
... sight . " The Lord will happiness divine On contrite hearts bestow , " & c . " My God , how perfect are thy ways , " & c . " The Saviour hides his face , " & c . " Lord , who hast suffered all for me , " & c . " As birds their infant ...
Side xli
... sight no beauty sees , The shapely limb and lubricated joint , Within the small dimensions of a point , Muscle and nerve miraculously spun , His mighty work , who speaks , and it is done , The invisible in things scarce seen revealed ...
... sight no beauty sees , The shapely limb and lubricated joint , Within the small dimensions of a point , Muscle and nerve miraculously spun , His mighty work , who speaks , and it is done , The invisible in things scarce seen revealed ...
Side xlii
William Cowper. At such a sight to catch the poet's flame , And with a rapture like his own exclaim , These are thy glorious works thou Source of Good , How dimly seen , how faintly understood ! " Further on , there is another strain of ...
William Cowper. At such a sight to catch the poet's flame , And with a rapture like his own exclaim , These are thy glorious works thou Source of Good , How dimly seen , how faintly understood ! " Further on , there is another strain of ...
Side xlviii
... literally have occurred in personal interviews between the poet and the reader . The latter never loses sight of the former ; and Cowper is so intelligent and animated a companion , that none would ever willingly forget xlviii.
... literally have occurred in personal interviews between the poet and the reader . The latter never loses sight of the former ; and Cowper is so intelligent and animated a companion , that none would ever willingly forget xlviii.
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ALEXANDER SELKIRK Aspasio beauty beneath bids blank verse blest boast breath cause charms Cowper deem delight distant divine dread dream e'en earth ease eyes fair fame fancy fatal egg fear feel fire flowers folly frown give glory grace hand happy hast heart Heaven honour hope hour human JOHN GILPIN JOSEPH HILL labour land light live lyre mankind mercy mind muse nature Nebaioth never night nymph o'er once peace perhaps pity pleasure poet poet's praise pride prize proud prove rapture rude sacred scene scorn seek seems shade shine sighs sight skies slave smile song soon soul sound stand stream sweet task taste telescopic eye thee theme thine thou thought thousand toil tongue trifler truth Twas verse VINCENT BOURNE virtue waste WILLIAM COWPER wind wisdom woes worth youth