The New Foundling Hospital for Wit: Being a Collection of Fugitive Pieces, in Prose and Verse, Not in Any Other Collection. With Several Pieces Never Before Published, 2. kötetJohn Almon J. Debrett, 1784 |
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1 - 5 találat összesen 36 találatból.
12. oldal
... whole apparatus of torture , are feen from the roads . Here too they conceal in cavities , on the fummits of the highest mountains , founderies , lime- kilns , and glass - works , which fend forth large volumes of flame , and continued ...
... whole apparatus of torture , are feen from the roads . Here too they conceal in cavities , on the fummits of the highest mountains , founderies , lime- kilns , and glass - works , which fend forth large volumes of flame , and continued ...
24. oldal
... whole lengths of BRUNSWICK's line , - Till B- firft dar'd to smut it . III . Since then - but wherefore tell the tale ? ! Enough , that now it burneth pale , And forely waftes its tallow : Nay , if thy poet rightly weens , ( Tho ...
... whole lengths of BRUNSWICK's line , - Till B- firft dar'd to smut it . III . Since then - but wherefore tell the tale ? ! Enough , that now it burneth pale , And forely waftes its tallow : Nay , if thy poet rightly weens , ( Tho ...
31. oldal
... whole intent Of that parade , was fame , not punishment . Intimating that his ears received no detriment in the pillorys My line intimates , that they did . However , if my intima- tion be falfe , it is eafily refuted : the Doctor has ...
... whole intent Of that parade , was fame , not punishment . Intimating that his ears received no detriment in the pillorys My line intimates , that they did . However , if my intima- tion be falfe , it is eafily refuted : the Doctor has ...
33. oldal
... whole , For Priestley has the cure of Sh - lb - e's foul , 50 Enough Ver . 33. Sir Thomas . ) The Petronius of the present age needs not the addition of a firname to make the world cer- tain who is meant by this appellative . Ver . 51 ...
... whole , For Priestley has the cure of Sh - lb - e's foul , 50 Enough Ver . 33. Sir Thomas . ) The Petronius of the present age needs not the addition of a firname to make the world cer- tain who is meant by this appellative . Ver . 51 ...
36. oldal
... whole skin , while one may ; 105 For Whigs are mighty prone to run stark mad , If credence in A -- hb ---- ps may be had . Therefore I'll keep within difcretion's rule , And turn true Tory of the M -------- d school . So fhall I ' fcape ...
... whole skin , while one may ; 105 For Whigs are mighty prone to run stark mad , If credence in A -- hb ---- ps may be had . Therefore I'll keep within difcretion's rule , And turn true Tory of the M -------- d school . So fhall I ' fcape ...
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aſk AUTO DE FE becauſe beft boaft boaſt breaſt Burgoyne ceaſe commodus dæmon DAVID GARRICK dead poem Dean E'en e'er eaſe faid fame fatire fave fcalps fcorn feems fenfe fhall fhew fhine fhould fince fing fire firft firſt flain fmiles fome fons foon foul fpirit ftand ftate ftill fubject fuch fuppofed fure fword Garrick give grace guife Heffians himſelf honour houſe Jack Ketch juft king Lady late Lord Lord Dunmore lyre Majefty minifters moft moſt mufe muft muſe muſt ne'er o'er occafion patriot perfons pleaſe pleaſure poet pow'r praiſe prefent profe QUIRE raiſe reaſon rebels reft rife ſcalping ſhall ſhe Shebbeare ſhine Sir Fletcher Sir William Chambers ſkill SOAME JENYNS ſome ſpeak ſtate ſtill tafte taſte thee thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thou thouſand thro uſe verfe Verſe Whigs Whilft whofe wiſh Yankey Yankies
Népszerű szakaszok
47. oldal - I have before showed, entrusted with this condition, and for this end, that men might have and secure their properties, the prince or senate, however it may have power to make laws for the regulating of property between the subjects one amongst another, yet can never have a power to take to themselves the whole, or any part of the subjects...
124. oldal - Turn to learning and gaming, religion and raking. With the love of a wench, let his writings be chaste ; Tip his tongue with strange matter, his pen with fine taste ; That the rake and the poet o'er all may prevail, Set fire...
148. oldal - Meantime, pure love looks on, and consecrates the scene. Come, then, immortal spirit of the stage, Great Nature's proxy, glass of ev'ry age! Come, taste the simple life of Patriarchs old, Who, rich in rural peace, ne'er thought of pomp or gold.
144. oldal - strut and fret" no more in any part ; No more in public scenes would I engage, Or wear the cap and mask on any stage.
3. oldal - ... which, though in reality different, still produce the same uniform kind of jingling; the variation being too minute to be easily perceived...
134. oldal - Shakspeare and Milton, like gods in the fight, Have put their whole drama and epic to flight; In satires, epistles, and odes, would they cope, Their numbers retreat before Dryden and Pope ; And Johnson, well-arm'd like a hero of yore, Has beat forty French,
124. oldal - Tip his tongue with strange matter, his pen with fine taste ; That the rake and the poet o'er all may prevail, Set fire to the head, and set fire to the tail.
15. oldal - Foote ; But if with higher bards that name you range, His modesty must think your judgment strange—- So when o'er Crane-court's philosophic gods, The Jove-like majesty of Pringle nods, If e'er he chance to wake on Newton's chair...
133. oldal - Talk of war with a Briton, he'll boldly advance, * That one Englifh foldier will beat ten of France ; * Would we alter the boaft from the fword to the pen, ' Our odds are ftill greater, ftill greater our men : ' In the deep mines of fcience though Frenchmen may toil, ' Can their ftrength be compar'd to Locke, Newton...
13. oldal - ... upon tea, in his postscript to his Dissertation. I am, however, vain enough to think, that the emperor's composition would have appeared still better in my heroic verse ; but sir William forestalled it; on which account 1 have entirely broke with him. « " A fine vein of solemn irony runs through this piece.