Poems by William Cowper ...J. Johnson and Company, 1815 |
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الصفحة xxii
... feeling mind , namely , why was not Mr. Cowper advised , intead of hazarding his tender and convalescent spirit among the strangers of Huntingdon , to recline it on the bosom of his friends in London ? it is incumbent on the writer to ...
... feeling mind , namely , why was not Mr. Cowper advised , intead of hazarding his tender and convalescent spirit among the strangers of Huntingdon , to recline it on the bosom of his friends in London ? it is incumbent on the writer to ...
الصفحة xxvii
... feeling afterwards proceeded , must have been long and faithfully devoted to his God and Father . The testimonies of his real piety were manifested to others , when least apparent to him- self . But where it pleased God to throw a veil ...
... feeling afterwards proceeded , must have been long and faithfully devoted to his God and Father . The testimonies of his real piety were manifested to others , when least apparent to him- self . But where it pleased God to throw a veil ...
الصفحة xxxv
... feel the effect of , not only while she is here , but while I live : " - to the second , thus , in a letter to the same friend , " I find myself here situated exactly to my mind . Weston is one of the prettiest villages in England , and ...
... feel the effect of , not only while she is here , but while I live : " - to the second , thus , in a letter to the same friend , " I find myself here situated exactly to my mind . Weston is one of the prettiest villages in England , and ...
الصفحة xxxvi
... feel a friendship , though I shall see thee with these eyes no more . " A Early in January 1787 , he was attacked with a nervous fever , which obliged him to discontinue his poetical efforts till the October following . few days after ...
... feel a friendship , though I shall see thee with these eyes no more . " A Early in January 1787 , he was attacked with a nervous fever , which obliged him to discontinue his poetical efforts till the October following . few days after ...
الصفحة l
... his noble friends , the highest in his esteem . " - " He was unhappily disabled , " continues his Biographer , " from feeling the favour he received , but an an nuity of three hundred a year was graciously secured to SKETCH OF THE.
... his noble friends , the highest in his esteem . " - " He was unhappily disabled , " continues his Biographer , " from feeling the favour he received , but an an nuity of three hundred a year was graciously secured to SKETCH OF THE.
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Æneas afflicted appear bard beneath boast Boötes born bosom breast breath brow Cacus call'd Cowper Damon death delight Dereham divine Dryope Eartham East Dereham ev'ry eyes fair fame Faunus fear flow'rs friendship gentle GEORGE ROMNEY grace grove hand happy Hayley heart Heav'n Homer honour hope Iliad John Throckmorton Jove kind kinsman labour Lady Austen Lady Hesketh lambs Latium length lyre Mary mind Mundsley Muse ne'er never night num'rous numbers nymphs o'er Olney once pain Pallas Philomela Phoebus poem Poet pow'r praise prove quæ rest Rose scarcely scene seem'd shade shore sight skies smile SONETTO song SONNET soon spirits spring sweet tears thee theme thine thoughts are due THRACIAN tibi translation Twas Unwin verse vex'd VINCENT BOURNE voice Weston WILLIAM COWPER WILLIAM HAYLEY wish worth write youth