Poems by William Cowper ... |
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الصفحة 18
O Liberty ! the pris'ners pleasing dream , The poet's muse , his passion , and his theme ; Genius is thine , and thou art Fancy's nurse ; Lost without thee th ' ennobling pow'rs of verse ; Heroick song from thy free touch acquires Its ...
O Liberty ! the pris'ners pleasing dream , The poet's muse , his passion , and his theme ; Genius is thine , and thou art Fancy's nurse ; Lost without thee th ' ennobling pow'rs of verse ; Heroick song from thy free touch acquires Its ...
الصفحة 20
365 Undaunted still , thongh wearied and perplex'd , Once Chatham sav'd thee ; but who saves thee next ? Alas ! the tide of pleasure sweeps along All , that should be the boast of British song . " Tis not the wreath , that once adorn'd ...
365 Undaunted still , thongh wearied and perplex'd , Once Chatham sav'd thee ; but who saves thee next ? Alas ! the tide of pleasure sweeps along All , that should be the boast of British song . " Tis not the wreath , that once adorn'd ...
الصفحة 23
To the lascivious pipe and wanton song , That charm down fear , they frolick it along , With mad rapidity and unconcern , Down to the gulf , from which is no return . They trust in navies , and their navies failGod's curse can cast away ...
To the lascivious pipe and wanton song , That charm down fear , they frolick it along , With mad rapidity and unconcern , Down to the gulf , from which is no return . They trust in navies , and their navies failGod's curse can cast away ...
الصفحة 24
But no prophetick fires to me belong ; I play with syllables , and sport in song . A. At Westminster , where little poets strive To set a distich upon six and five , Where Discipline helps th ' op'ning buds of sense , And makes his ...
But no prophetick fires to me belong ; I play with syllables , and sport in song . A. At Westminster , where little poets strive To set a distich upon six and five , Where Discipline helps th ' op'ning buds of sense , And makes his ...
الصفحة 25
From him who rears a poem lank and long , To him who strains his all into a song ; Perhaps some bonny Caledonian air , All birks and braes , though he was never there ; Or , having whelp'd a prologue with great pains , Feels himself ...
From him who rears a poem lank and long , To him who strains his all into a song ; Perhaps some bonny Caledonian air , All birks and braes , though he was never there ; Or , having whelp'd a prologue with great pains , Feels himself ...
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appears beneath bids busy cause charms close course dark delight divine dream earth ev'ry eyes face fair fall fancy fear feel fire fruit give glory grace ground half hand happy hast head hear heart Heav'n hope hour human joys kind land laws lead less light live look lost mankind mean meet mind muse Nature never night once pain peace perhaps plain play pleasure poor pow'r praise pride prove race rest rich sacred scene seen sense shine side sight skies smile song soon soul sound speak spread stand stream sure sweet taste teach tell thee theme thine things thou thought thousand tongue true truth turn virtue waste wisdom wrong