Providence: An Allegorical Poem in Three BooksG. Burnet, 1764 - 192 pages |
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Ægypt aereal Æther afcent Alcibiades Allegory Athenians atmoſphere beam beauteous becauſe Behold bloom bluſhing boundleſs breath Burſts cheek clime cloud cloudy Hills confequences Darkneſs defart defcending Deity diftant Diſeaſe diſplay'd earth eaſe Eternal faid fays fcene fearch fecret fhade fide filver fimple firſt fkies fmiling foft folemn fome fons form'd foul ftep ftill ftream fubject fuch fuperior fuppofed fwelling gale gaze grafp groves hand happineſs hath heart Heav'n hills human juft laſt lawn lefs Line loft loofe looſe mantling mark'd mind moſt Nature neceffary o'er obferve occafions Paffion philofophical Plato Pleaſure pour'd Power preſent purpoſe raiſed reafon rifing rill robe roll'd ruſhing ſcene ſhape Sire ſmile ſome ſpoke ſpread ſtarting ſtate ſtep ſweet thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thou thought thro tranſport trembling truth Virtue voice wafte waſte wave weak whofe whoſe wild winds wing Wiſdom wrapt Xenoph
Popular passages
Page 38 - No pleasing intricacies intervene, No artful wildness to perplex the scene ; Grove nods at grove, each alley has a brother, And half the platform just reflects the other.
Page 108 - Ionic then, with decent matron grace, Her airy pillar heaved ; luxuriant last, The rich Corinthian spread her wanton wreath. The whole so measured true, so lessen'd off By fine proportion, that the marble pile, Form'd to repel the still or stormy waste Of rolling ages, light as fabrics look'd That from the magic wand aerial rise.
Page 95 - ... two towards the ground. Another mode of representing Mithras, usual at Rome (for the Romans adopted this god of the Persians, as they did those of all other nations, though they paid him a very different sort of worship from that of Apollo,) was...
Page 87 - And feem'da Goddefs from celeftial climes' To man defcending, that her lenient hand Might point the path to Happinefs. Her head A crown encircled ; o'er her limbs a robe Floated in...
Page 190 - Th' obsequious means to move. — O ye, who toss'd On life's tumultuous ocean, eye the shore* Yet far remov'd ; and wish the happy hour, When slumber on her downy couch shall lull Your cares to sweet repose ; yet bear awhile, And I will guide you to the balmy climes Of rest ; will lay you by the silver stream Crown'd with elysian bow'rs, where peace extends Her blooming olive, and the tempest pours Its killing blast no more." Thus Wisdom speaks To man ; thus calls him thro' the external form Of nature,...
Page 133 - Before Confumption ; when her baleful fpunge Drops its green poifon on the fprings of life. NOR thefe alone purfue the race of man. Far other ills await, far other woes Like vultures revel on his canker'd heart. 25 O ye who nightly languifh o'er the tomb, Where fleeps thy duft, Eugenio!
Page 187 - Idemque cum cœlum, terras, maria, rerumque omnium naturam perspexerit, eaque unde generata, quo recurrant, quando, quo modo obitura, quid in iis mortale et caducum, quid divinum...
Page 90 - His deep fearching eye Had feen the fraud of yon deceitful glais, Had warn'd the throng to fhun th' infidious f hart, Had kept them innocent, didft thon defcribe His fphere with truth.
Page 61 - Gay plenty reigns ! Afcending as he fpoke From the blue deep, to my tranfported gaze .-, Rofe the white cliffs of Albion. Hail beloved Of Heav'n ! (with joy exclaim'd th' inraptured Sire) Britannia hail!
Page 181 - From feeming evil ftill educing good, And better thence again, and better ftill, In infinite progreffion. But I lofe Myfelf in him, in light ineffable ! Come then, expreffive filence, mufe his praife; HYMN CLV.