The Poetical Works of Thomas GrayWilliam Pickering, 1853 - 223 стор. |
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Сторінка xvi
... lost it all at once and since that I have lived with Mr. Chute , who is all vehemence ; with Mr. Fox , who is all disputation ; with Sir C. Williams , who has no time from flattery , himself ; and with Gray , who does not hate to find ...
... lost it all at once and since that I have lived with Mr. Chute , who is all vehemence ; with Mr. Fox , who is all disputation ; with Sir C. Williams , who has no time from flattery , himself ; and with Gray , who does not hate to find ...
Сторінка xvi
... lost his companion , and , with the separation of friendship , all inducement to remain abroad , Gray went immediately to Venice , and re- turned through Padua and Milan , following almost the same road through France , which he had tra ...
... lost his companion , and , with the separation of friendship , all inducement to remain abroad , Gray went immediately to Venice , and re- turned through Padua and Milan , following almost the same road through France , which he had tra ...
Сторінка xvi
... lost the friendship of Mr. Walpole abroad . He had also lost much time in his travels ; a loss which application could not easily retrieve , when so severe and laborious a study as that of the Common Law was to be the object of it ; and ...
... lost the friendship of Mr. Walpole abroad . He had also lost much time in his travels ; a loss which application could not easily retrieve , when so severe and laborious a study as that of the Common Law was to be the object of it ; and ...
Сторінка xxi
... lost much of its elegance in the endeavour to accommodate it with precision to the subject . Gray's residence at Cambridge was now conti- nued , not from any partiality to the place where he received his education , but partly from the ...
... lost much of its elegance in the endeavour to accommodate it with precision to the subject . Gray's residence at Cambridge was now conti- nued , not from any partiality to the place where he received his education , but partly from the ...
Сторінка xxx
... lost the mother , whom he had so long and so affectionately loved ; and he his uncle has completely libelled both his poet and his patron without intending to do so . " Mr. Cumberland says , at p . 216 of the same volume , that Gray ...
... lost the mother , whom he had so long and so affectionately loved ; and he his uncle has completely libelled both his poet and his patron without intending to do so . " Mr. Cumberland says , at p . 216 of the same volume , that Gray ...
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Agrippina Alcaic stanza Amor ancient Anicetus appears atque Bard beautiful cæsura called Cambridge Cicero Claudian Comus Cowley death Dodsley Dryden Dunciad Eclog edition editor elegant Elegy English Essay Eton College expression fate genius Georg Gray Gray's hæc honour Horace horror ignes imitation king language Latin letter Lord Lord Sandwich Lucret Lucretius Luke Lycidas Masinissa Mason says Mason's Memoirs Mathias mihi Milt Milton mind Muse night o'er oculos Odin original Ovid passage Petrarch Pindar poem poet poetical poetry Pope printed Propert Prophetess published quæ rhyme Rogers satire sister smile soft song Spenser Spring stanza Statius taste thee THOMAS GRAY Thomson thou thought thro tion translated vale verse viii Virg Wakefield Walpole Walpole's Warton weep West word write written wrote