The Poems of Ossian, Volume 2A Strahan, 1790 |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-5 van 68
Pagina 7
... fong : to - mor- row break the fpears ! Tell him that I have raised the tomb of Cathol * ; that bards gave his friend to the winds . Tell him that Cairbar has heard of his fame , at the ftream of refounding Carunt . Cathmor my brother ...
... fong : to - mor- row break the fpears ! Tell him that I have raised the tomb of Cathol * ; that bards gave his friend to the winds . Tell him that Cairbar has heard of his fame , at the ftream of refounding Carunt . Cathmor my brother ...
Pagina 9
... fong . Cormac , the fon of Arth , had given the fpear , which is here the foundation of the quarrel , to Ofcar , when he came to congratulate him upon Swaran's being expelled from Ireland . Ti ' mór - i ' , the houfe of the great king ...
... fong . Cormac , the fon of Arth , had given the fpear , which is here the foundation of the quarrel , to Ofcar , when he came to congratulate him upon Swaran's being expelled from Ireland . Ti ' mór - i ' , the houfe of the great king ...
Pagina 10
... fong ? No : Cairbar , frighten the feeble Ofcar is a rock ! " " Wilt thou not yield the fpear ? ” replied the rifing pride of Cairbar . " Are thy words fo mighty , because Fingal is near ? Fingal with aged locks , from Morven's hundred ...
... fong ? No : Cairbar , frighten the feeble Ofcar is a rock ! " " Wilt thou not yield the fpear ? ” replied the rifing pride of Cairbar . " Are thy words fo mighty , because Fingal is near ? Fingal with aged locks , from Morven's hundred ...
Pagina 14
... fong of grief , have melted Of- car's foul . My foul , that never melted before . It was like the steel of fword . Offian , carry me to my hills ! Raise the stones of my renown . Place the horn of a deer : place my fword by my fide ...
... fong of grief , have melted Of- car's foul . My foul , that never melted before . It was like the steel of fword . Offian , carry me to my hills ! Raise the stones of my renown . Place the horn of a deer : place my fword by my fide ...
Pagina 15
... fong is raised over the chief . His foul had been dark and bloody . The bards . remembered the fall of Cormac what could they fay in Cairbar's praife ? Night came rolling down . The light of an hundred oaks arofe . Fingal fat beneath a ...
... fong is raised over the chief . His foul had been dark and bloody . The bards . remembered the fall of Cormac what could they fay in Cairbar's praife ? Night came rolling down . The light of an hundred oaks arofe . Fingal fat beneath a ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
againſt anceſtors ancient arife Atha bards battle beam behold blaft blaſt Cairbar Caledonians Carril Cathmor chief circumftances Clono cloud coaft compofitions Conar Cormac courfe courſe Cuthullin dark darkneſs daugh death defart defcended defcription Erin eyes faid fame father feaft feems fentiment fhall fhield fhould fide field figh filent Fillan fimiles Fingal Firbolg firft firſt flain Foldath fome fong foul fpear fpirit fpread fteps ftill ftream ftrength ftrife fubject fublime fuch fword Gaul ghofts ghoſt hall harp hear heard heath heroes hill himſelf hoft Homer Iliad Ireland Iriſh king laſt lift midſt mift miſt moffy moft Moi-lena Morni Morven moſt muſt night occafion Ofcar Offian pafs perfon Picts poem poet poetry poffeffed praiſe prefent raiſed reft rife rock roes rofe rolled Scots Selma ſhall ſon ſtate ſteps Strutha Sul-malla Temora thee thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thou tomb Uthal voice warriors waves winds
Populaire passages
Pagina 262 - In thoughts from the visions of the night, when deep sleep falleth on men, fear came upon me, and trembling, which made all my bones to shake. Then a spirit passed before my face ; the hair of my flesh stood up. It stood still, but I could not discern the form thereof: an image was before mine eyes, there was silence, and I heard a voice, saying, "Shall mortal man be more just than God?
Pagina 15 - The days of my years begin to fail: I feel the weaknefs of my arm. My fathers bend from their clouds, to receive their grey-hair'd fon.
Pagina 298 - Like Autumn's dark storms pouring from two echoing hills, towards each other approached the heroes; as two dark streams from high rocks meet and roar on the plain, loud, rough, and dark in battle, meet Lochlin and Inisfail.
Pagina 235 - He sighed thrice over the hero : thrice the winds of night roared around ! Many were his words to Oscar; but they only came by halves to our ears ; they were dark as the tales of other times, before the light of the song arose.
Pagina 217 - ... The genius of men is then much turned to admiration and astonishment. Meeting with many objects, to them new and strange, their imagination Is kept glowing, and their passions are often raised to the utmost. They think and express themselves boldly, and without restraint. In the progress of society, the genius and manners of men undergo a change more favourable to accuracy, than to strength or sublimity.
Pagina 261 - A dark red stream of fire comes down from the hill. Crugal sat upon the beam : he that lately fell by the hand of Swaran striving in the battle of heroes. His face is like the beam of the setting moon : his robes are of the clouds of the hill : his eyes are like two decaying flames. Dark is the wound on his breast. The stars dim-twinkled through his form ; and his voice was like the sound of a distant stream.
Pagina 24 - Ossian to order a funeral elegy to be sung over the grave of Cairbar, it being the opinion of the times that the souls of the dead could not be happy till their elegies were sung by a bard.
Pagina 14 - O warriors, in the day of our fall. Then let us be renowned when we may; and leave our fame behind us, like the...
Pagina 320 - Mr Macpherson's translation is, we must never forget, whilst we read it, that we are putting the merit of the original to a severe test. For, we are examining a poet stripped of his native dress: divested of the harmony of his own numbers. We know how much grace and energy the works of the Greek and Latin poets receive from the charm of versification in their original languages.
Pagina 180 - The times of regular government, and polished manners, are therefore to be wished for by the feeble and weak in mind. An unsettled state, and those convulsions which attend it, is the proper field for an exalted character, and the exertion of great parts. Merit there rises always superior; no fortuitous event can raise the timid and mean into power. To...