| English poets - 1801 - 488 pagina’s
...fatal lion shun ; You found me harmless — leave me so ! For, were I not, you'd leave me too. SONG. LOVE still has something of the sea, From whence his mother rose : No time his slaves from doubt can free, Nor give their thoughts repose. They are becalm'd in clearest... | |
| George Ellis - 1803 - 474 pagina’s
...fatal lion shun ; You found me harmless — leave me so ! For, were I not, you'd leave me too. SONG. -. LOVE still has something of the sea, From whence his mother rose : No time his slaves from doubt can free, Nor give their thoughts repose. They are becalm'd in clearest... | |
| Rowland Freeman - 1821 - 846 pagina’s
...love you must have spy'd ; And thinking it a foolish part, To set to shew, what none can hide. SONG. Love still has something of the sea, From whence his mother rose; No time his slaves from doubt can free, Nor give their thoughts repose : They are becalm'd in clearest... | |
| Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton - 1835 - 382 pagina’s
...borrows a moral from Lycophron, and next he assures us, in one of the prettiest of his songs that — ' Love still has something of the sea From whence his mother rose.' Dryden, whose excellence never lay in an accurate taste, though in his admirable prose writings he proves that he knew the theory while... | |
| Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton - 1836 - 402 pagina’s
...borrows a moral from Lycophron, and next he assures us, in one of the prettiest of his songs, that ' Love still has something of the sea From whence his...while he neglected the practice, is less painfully classbal and unseasonably mythological than might have Been expected ; and as from his time the school... | |
| Samuel Carter Hall - 1836 - 336 pagina’s
...pieces have passages of great ten derness and undouhted wit, they are not generally suceessful. SEDLEY. LOVE still has something of the sea, From whence his mother rose ; No time his slaves from douht can free, Nor give their thoughts repose : They are hecalm'd in clearest... | |
| Samuel Carter Hall - 1836 - 390 pagina’s
...pieces have passages of great tenderness and undoubted wit, they are not generally successful. SEDLEY. LOVE still has something of the sea, From whence his mother rose ; No time his slaves from doubt can free, Nor give their thoughts repose : They are becalm'd in clearest... | |
| Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton - 1837 - 1058 pagina’s
...Love still has something of the sea From whence his mother rose.1 Dryden, whose excellence never lay in an accurate taste, though in his admirable prose...mythological than might have been expected : and as from his time the school of poetry became more systematically copied from a classical model, so it became less... | |
| Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton - 1841 - 370 pagina’s
...borrows a moral from Lycophron, and next he assures us, in one of the prettiest of his songs that — "Love still has something of the sea From whence his...while he neglected the practice, is less painfully classic and unseasonably mythological than might have been expected ; and as from his time the school... | |
| Edward Vaughan Kenealy - 1845 - 356 pagina’s
...And then the wretched heart is lost. Smooth and pretty — but appropriated from SIR CHARLES SEDLEY. Love still has something of the sea From whence his mother rose ; No time his slaves from doubt can free Or give their hearts repose. |3l«i<j!,inSm tl)r MOORE'S Anacreontic.... | |
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