The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, D.D. ...: With Notes, Historical and Critical, Volume 10W. Durell, 1812 |
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Page 16
... better worth your noble pain , Here mankind fell , and hence must rise again . 11 . XI . Shall I believe a spirit so divine Was cast in the same mould with mine ? Why then does Nature so unjustly share Among her elder sons the whole ...
... better worth your noble pain , Here mankind fell , and hence must rise again . 11 . XI . Shall I believe a spirit so divine Was cast in the same mould with mine ? Why then does Nature so unjustly share Among her elder sons the whole ...
Page 35
... better day , some druid dwelt , And the young Muse's early favour felt ; Druid , a name she does with pride repeat , Confessing Albion once her darling seat ; Far in this primitive cell might we pursue Our predecessors ' footsteps ...
... better day , some druid dwelt , And the young Muse's early favour felt ; Druid , a name she does with pride repeat , Confessing Albion once her darling seat ; Far in this primitive cell might we pursue Our predecessors ' footsteps ...
Page 36
... better animals , her father's sheep ; Shamed and amazed , beholds the chatt'ring throng , To think what cattle she has got among ; But with the odious smell and sight annoy'd , In haste she does th ' offensive herd avoid . † ' Tis time ...
... better animals , her father's sheep ; Shamed and amazed , beholds the chatt'ring throng , To think what cattle she has got among ; But with the odious smell and sight annoy'd , In haste she does th ' offensive herd avoid . † ' Tis time ...
Page 38
... better world , and chosen then The best companion for the best of men : As some fair pile , yet spared by zeal and rage , Lives pious witness of a better age ; So men may see what once was womankind , In the fair shrine of Dorothea's ...
... better world , and chosen then The best companion for the best of men : As some fair pile , yet spared by zeal and rage , Lives pious witness of a better age ; So men may see what once was womankind , In the fair shrine of Dorothea's ...
Page 47
... better : And then your poor petitioner , both night and day , Or the Chaplain ( for ' tis his trade , ) as in duty bound , shall ever pray . A BALLAD , ON THE GAME OF TRAFFICK . WRITTEN AT THE CASTLE OF DUBLIN , .1699 . MY Lord , to ...
... better : And then your poor petitioner , both night and day , Or the Chaplain ( for ' tis his trade , ) as in duty bound , shall ever pray . A BALLAD , ON THE GAME OF TRAFFICK . WRITTEN AT THE CASTLE OF DUBLIN , .1699 . MY Lord , to ...
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Common terms and phrases
Apollo Behold Cadenus call'd court crown dame DANIEL JACKSON Dean dear Delany delight divine Dublin Duchess of Somerset e'er ears eyes face fair fame fancy fate fill'd fix'd flame flies fools give grace half hand head hear heart Heaven honour humble John Rochfort John Vanbrugh Journal to Stella Jove king lady light look lord lord treasurer maid mighty mind mortal Muse ne'er never night nose numbers nymph o'er once pain Pallas passion peace Phoebus plac'd pleas'd poem poets poor praise pride quarterstaffs queen rais'd resolv'd rhyme rise Rochfort round scorn shame Sheridan shine sight soul spleen Stella swear Swift t'other TATTLER tell thee thing THOMAS SHERIDAN thou thought town Twas twill us'd Vanessa verse vex'd virtue Whene'er whig wine wise wonder writ
Popular passages
Page 46 - don't be angry, I am sure I never thought you so ; You know I honour the cloth ; I design to be a Parson's wife ; I never took one in your coat for a conjurer in all my life.
Page 111 - Of land, set out to plant a wood. Well, now I have all this and more, I ask not to increase my store ; But here a grievance seems to lie, All this is mine but till I die ; 10 I can't but think 'twould sound more clever, To me and to my heirs for ever.
Page 115 - How think you of our friend the Dean ? I wonder what some people mean? My lord and he are grown so great, Always together tete-a-tete ; What ! they admire him for his jokes ! — See but the fortune of some folks...
Page 164 - Preferring his regard for me Before his credit, or his fee. Some formal visits, looks, and words, What mere humanity affords, I meet perhaps from three or four, From whom I once expected more ; Which those who tend the sick for pay, Can act as decently as they : But no obliging, tender friend, To help at my approaching end. My life is now a burthen grown To others, ere it be my own.
Page 138 - Cadenus many things had writ : Vanessa much esteem'd his wit, And call'd for his poetic works : Meantime the boy in secret lurks ; And, while the book was in her hand, The urchin from his private stand Took aim, and shot with all his strength A dart of such prodigious length, It pierc'd the feeble volume through, And deep transfix 'd her bosom too.
Page 81 - That swill'd more liquor than it could contain, And like a drunkard gives it up again. Brisk Susan whips her linen from the rope, While the first drizzling...
Page 72 - A bedstead of the antique mode, Compact of timber many a load, Such as our ancestors did use, Was metamorphos'd into pews, Which still their ancient nature keep, By lodging folks dispos'd to sleep.
Page 127 - Incapable of outward stains : From whence that decency of mind, So lovely in the female kind, "Where not one careless thought intrudes, Less modest than the speech of prudes ; Where never blush was call'd in aid, That spurious virtue in a maid, A virtue but at second-hand ; They blush, because they understand.
Page 81 - While spouts run clattering o'er the roof by fits, And ever and anon with frightful din The leather sounds ; he trembles from within. So when...
Page 141 - To form and cultivate her mind. He hardly knew, till he was told, Whether the nymph were young or old ; Had met her in a public place, Without distinguishing her face...