The feast of the poets, with notes, and other pieces in verse, by the editor of The Examiner. The dedication signed: Leigh HuntLondon, 1815 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 9
Page xii
... treated in it's most ordinary light , with the degradation of the God into a mere critic or chairman , it has hitherto received none of those touches of painting , and combinations of the familiar and fanciful , of which it appears so ...
... treated in it's most ordinary light , with the degradation of the God into a mere critic or chairman , it has hitherto received none of those touches of painting , and combinations of the familiar and fanciful , of which it appears so ...
Page 2
... treating . So saying , the God bade his horses walk for'ard , And leaving them , took a long dive to the nor'ard : For Gordon's he made ; and as Gods who drop in do , Came smack on his legs through the drawing - room window . And here I ...
... treating . So saying , the God bade his horses walk for'ard , And leaving them , took a long dive to the nor'ard : For Gordon's he made ; and as Gods who drop in do , Came smack on his legs through the drawing - room window . And here I ...
Page 6
... treat him as well as you're able , And let him have part of what goes from the table . " A soft , smiling voice then arose on the ear , As if some one from court was about to appear : - ' Oh , this is the room , my good friend ? Ah I ...
... treat him as well as you're able , And let him have part of what goes from the table . " A soft , smiling voice then arose on the ear , As if some one from court was about to appear : - ' Oh , this is the room , my good friend ? Ah I ...
Page 29
Leigh Hunt. Pope's versification " by principles rather than perception , " treating the accusation against him as a cant , and suspecting that the accusers themselves " would have less pleasure in his works , if he had tried to relieve ...
Leigh Hunt. Pope's versification " by principles rather than perception , " treating the accusation against him as a cant , and suspecting that the accusers themselves " would have less pleasure in his works , if he had tried to relieve ...
Page 46
... treat him as well as you're able , And let him have part of what goes from the table . { Mr. Crabbe is unquestionably a man of genius , possessing imagination , observation , originality : he has even 46 NOTES ON THE.
... treat him as well as you're able , And let him have part of what goes from the table . { Mr. Crabbe is unquestionably a man of genius , possessing imagination , observation , originality : he has even 46 NOTES ON THE.
Common terms and phrases
abstrac admirers affected allusion alter Apollo appears beautiful better Bob Southey bow'd bright called Castle of Indolence character Coleridge court of Aldermen cried criticism Dryden elegant Eloisa to Abelard enjoyment exquisite eyes Fairfax fancy faults favourite Feast feeling flow'r forget friends genius Giaour give graceful harmony Hayley heart idle imitation Italian Jump-up-and-kiss-me Juvenal King Laureat laurels least LEIGH HUNT less lines look look'd Lord Byron Lyrical Ballads mind Montepulciano never notes o'er original passage passion perhaps persons Phoebus piece Pindar poem poet poetical poetry Pope praise prince PYRRHA readers respect rhyme ribaldry satire Scott seem'd seems sense Shakspeare shew simplicity singular Sirmio smiles society song speak Spenser and Milton spirit style taste thee thing thought tion trifling turn turn'd twas only Bob verses versification vex'd vulgar Walter Scott wine words Wordsworth writers written