The Works of the Rev. George Crabbe, Volume 2J. Murray, 1823 - English poetry |
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Page xiv
... pain- ful , and that I am encouraged to take upon myself the decision of various points , which heretofore I entreated my friends to decide . Those friends were then my council , whose opinion I was implicitly to follow ; they are now ...
... pain- ful , and that I am encouraged to take upon myself the decision of various points , which heretofore I entreated my friends to decide . Those friends were then my council , whose opinion I was implicitly to follow ; they are now ...
Page xxi
... painful to the mind of a soberly devout per- son , when he hears every rise and fall of the animal spirits , every whim and notion of enthusiastic igno- rance , expressed in the venerable language of the Apostles and Evangelists . The ...
... painful to the mind of a soberly devout per- son , when he hears every rise and fall of the animal spirits , every whim and notion of enthusiastic igno- rance , expressed in the venerable language of the Apostles and Evangelists . The ...
Page xxix
... pain than what arises from the fear of not being trusted , joined with the apprehension that they may have nothing to subsist upon except their credit . For the Alms - House itself , its Governors and In- habitants , I have not much to ...
... pain than what arises from the fear of not being trusted , joined with the apprehension that they may have nothing to subsist upon except their credit . For the Alms - House itself , its Governors and In- habitants , I have not much to ...
Page xxxiv
... pain caused by sympathy should serve for more than a stimulus to benevolence . If then the strength and solidity of truth placed before our eyes have effect so feeble and transitory , I need not be very apprehensive that my ...
... pain caused by sympathy should serve for more than a stimulus to benevolence . If then the strength and solidity of truth placed before our eyes have effect so feeble and transitory , I need not be very apprehensive that my ...
Page 5
... pains , half grounded , half afloat ; While at her stern an angler takes his stand , And marks the fish he purposes ... painful dredger's welcome sound ; And few themselves the savoury boon deny , The food LET . I. GENERAL DESCRIPTION .
... pains , half grounded , half afloat ; While at her stern an angler takes his stand , And marks the fish he purposes ... painful dredger's welcome sound ; And few themselves the savoury boon deny , The food LET . I. GENERAL DESCRIPTION .
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Common terms and phrases
ALBEMARLE STREET Arminian behold Blaney BOROUGH Calvinistic cheerful Claudian comfort cried crime dare deed delight dread dwell ease evil fame favourite fear feel felt fix'd foes friends gain'd GEORGE CRABBE give grace grave grief grieve hear heart honour hope hour humble John Bunyan Juvenal kind labour LETTER live look look'd man's meads of asphodel mind misery never night numbers nymphs o'er once Ovid oxymel pain pass'd passions peace Peter PETER GRIMES pity pleasant pleasure poison'd poor praise pride priest race racter reader rest rise Satan scenes scorn seem'd shame sigh Sir Denys sleep slow centuries smile soothed soul speech spirit spleen terrors thee thou thought took town trade trembling tried truth twas vex'd vice virtue walk wealth whist worth wretched youth