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Common terms and phrasesAddison affairs amusements ancient Arbuthnot barbarous Barn Elms better bishop of Winchester called character chivalry Cicero composition confess conversation court Cowley deserve Dialogue Digby doubt elegance Elizabeth entertainment expect expression fame fancy favour fense fortune genius give grace hath hear honour humour indulge ject language learned least lived logue Lord Lord Clarendon Lord Falkland LORD SHAFTESBURY lordship manner masques matter mean ment mind modern moral Muse natural Nereids never Nymphs observe occasion panegyric persons Philip Sidney philosophy Plato pleasure poetry poets present princes purpose queen racter reason reflexions reign retirement returned ridicule rience romance ruins scene shew siction sield Sincerity sine sire sirst Socratic Dialogue speak speakers spirit Sprat suppose taken tence thing thou thought tion true truth turn virtue WALLER words writer Popular passagesPage 165 - and wait of the dog to take his advantage ; and the force and experience of the bear again to avoid the aflaults ; if he were bitten in one place, how he would pinch in another to get free ; and if he were once taken, then what fliift with biting, clawing, Page 92 - Where do we finer ftrokes and colours fee •Of the Creator's real poetry ; Than when we with attention look Upon the third day's volume of the book ? If we could open and intend our eye, We all, like Page 130 - wore, In which all colours, and all figures were, That nature, or that fancy can create, That art can never imitate ; And with loofe pride it wanton'd in the air. In fuch a drefs, in fuch a well-cloath'd dream, She us'd of old, near fair Page 136 - thy colours But never will reduce the native white ; To all the ports of honour and of gain, I often fteer my courfe in vain, Thy gale comes crofs, and drives me back again. Thou flack'neft all my nerves of Page 135 - iloleft me away, And my abufed foul didft bear Into thy new-found worlds I know not where, Thy golden Indies in the air ; And ever fince I ftrive in vain My raviih'd freedom to regain Page 192 - be dad : My men, like SATYRS, grazing on the lawns, Shall with their goat-feet dance the antic hay : ( Sometimes a lovely boy in DIAN'S Page 130 - PINDAR her THEBAN favourite to meet; A crown was on her head, and wings were on her feet. II. She touch'd him with her harp, and rais'd him from the ground ; The iliaken Page 22 - to declare their opinion freely in the houfe ; which could not be believed, when all men knew what liberty Mr. WALLER took, and fpoke every day with impunity, Page 158 - fpread the interefts of fociety, and knit mankind together by a generous communication in thefe advantages of wealth and fortune ? The arts of a refined fequeftered luxury were then unknown. The fame bell, that called the great man to his table, invited the neighbourhood all around, and proclaimed a holiday to the whole country [/»]. Who does not feel the decorum, Page 186 - was, to welcome the Queen to this palace, and at the fame time to celebrate the honours . of her government. And what more decent way of complimenting a great Prince, than through the veil of fiction ? Or what fo elegant way of entertaining a learned Prince, as by working up that fiction out of the old poetical ftory References from web pagesHurd, Richard. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07 Internet Archive Search: creator:"Hurd, Richard, 1720-1808" Online Catalog - mor Chicago Journals - Journal of British Studies JSTOR: Bishop Hurd: A Reinterpretation NEW Hume web biblio 26_08_2004.qxd Bibliographic information |