The Poetical Works of John Dryden, Volume 3W. Pickering, 1832 |
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Page 37
... , around . 10 IV . YE blustering brethren of the skies , Whose breath has ruffled all the watery plain , Retire , and let Britannia rise , In triumph o'er the main . Serene and calm , and void of fear , The OF DRYDEN . 337.
... , around . 10 IV . YE blustering brethren of the skies , Whose breath has ruffled all the watery plain , Retire , and let Britannia rise , In triumph o'er the main . Serene and calm , and void of fear , The OF DRYDEN . 337.
Page 38
John Dryden. Serene and calm , and void of fear , The Queen of Islands must appear : Serene and calm , as when the Spring The new created world began , And birds on boughs did softly sing Their peaceful homage paid to man ; While Eurus ...
John Dryden. Serene and calm , and void of fear , The Queen of Islands must appear : Serene and calm , as when the Spring The new created world began , And birds on boughs did softly sing Their peaceful homage paid to man ; While Eurus ...
Page 43
... fear these , our ene- That rather seem to us like deities ? [ mies , QUE . By their protection , let us beg to live ; They came not here to conquer , but forgive . If so , your goodness may your power express , And we shall judge both ...
... fear these , our ene- That rather seem to us like deities ? [ mies , QUE . By their protection , let us beg to live ; They came not here to conquer , but forgive . If so , your goodness may your power express , And we shall judge both ...
Page 48
... fear . 10 15 20 He saw his way ; but in so swift a pace , To choose the ground might be to lose the race . They then , who of each trip the advantage take , Find but those faults , which they want wit to make . EPILOGUE TO THE WILD ...
... fear . 10 15 20 He saw his way ; but in so swift a pace , To choose the ground might be to lose the race . They then , who of each trip the advantage take , Find but those faults , which they want wit to make . EPILOGUE TO THE WILD ...
Page 50
... fear scarce o'er , Expecting famine on a desert shore . From that hard climate we must wait for bread , Whence e'en the natives , forc'd by hunger , fled . Our stage does human chance present to view , But ne'er before was seen so sadly ...
... fear scarce o'er , Expecting famine on a desert shore . From that hard climate we must wait for bread , Whence e'en the natives , forc'd by hunger , fled . Our stage does human chance present to view , But ne'er before was seen so sadly ...
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Common terms and phrases
ALBION AND ALBANIUS Arcite arms beauty behold betwixt blood breast call'd chang'd Chaucer court damn dare dead death delight disdain Dryden e'en e'er Emily English EPILOGUE eyes fair fate fear fight fire fool fops forc'd GEORGE ETHERIDGE grace happy haste heart heaven honour hope humour JOHN DRYDEN joys judge kind king ladies live lord Lord Roscommon Lucretius mighty mind monarch mortal muse nature ne'er never night numbers nymph o'er once Ovid Oxford bells pain Palamon Pindar plain play pleas'd pleasure poet poetry prince PROLOGUE queen race rais'd reign rest reviving play rhyme sacred scarce scenes sense sleep song Sophocles soul stage strife sweet theatres Thebes thee Theocritus Theseus THESPIS things thou thought translated true twas UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD verse Virgil whate'er Whig words wretch writ write youth