| James Ewing Ritchie - 1861 - 314 sayfa
...Arcadian, and very much like what we see at the Adelphi, on the occasion of a rustic fete. Hear him sing, "At ease reclined, in rustic state, How vain the ardour...low, how little are the proud, How indigent the great ! " Who would not be Strephon rather than your muchto-be-pitied lord ! Indeed so over-weighted is the... | |
| James Ewing Ritchie - 1861 - 320 sayfa
...Arcadian, and very much like what we see at the Adelphi, on the occasion of a rustic f£te. Hear him sing, "At ease reclined, in rustic state, How vain the ardour of the crowd, How low, how Kttle are the proud, How indigent the great ! " Who would not be Strephon rather than your much' to-be-pitied... | |
| Thomas Gray - 1862 - 358 sayfa
...whispering pleasure as they fly, Cool Zephyrs thro' the clear blue sky Their gathered fragance fling. Where'er the oak's thick branches stretch A broader...water's rushy brink With me the Muse shall sit, and thint omnia." Also in the Pervigil. Vener. v. 13: " Ipsa gemmis purpurantem pingit annum fioribus."... | |
| Thomas Gray, Samuel Johnson, Oliver Goldsmith - 1926 - 206 sayfa
...pleasure as they fly, Cool Zephyrs thro' the clear blue sky Their gather'd fragrance fling. 10 Wherever the oak's thick branches stretch A broader browner shade ; Where'er the rude and moss-grown beech O er-canopies the glade,* Beside some water's rushy brink With me the Muse shall sit, and think (At... | |
| 1877 - 926 sayfa
...in dear old England, and which were so happily depicted, in harmonious numbers, by the poet Gray : Where'er the oak's thick branches stretch A broader...some water's rushy brink With me the muse shall sit. . . . Here, too, it may be added, the sportsman may carry his gun, may ride to hounds, or wield the... | |
| Herbert Lockyer - 1988 - 324 sayfa
...greatness, pride." But Herod was to learn die truth of the lines of Thomas Gray— How vain the ardor of the crowd, How low, how little are the proud, How indigent the great! Pride, above all things, provokes "a jealous God," who will not give His glory to another, and His... | |
| Rodney Stenning Edgecombe - 1994 - 290 sayfa
...Here, however, Gray satirizes his own detachment by presenting his muse as someone prim and censorious: Where'er the oak's thick branches stretch A broader...how little are the proud, How indigent the great! 25 Hunt cuts his muse from very different cloth. Bridget Allworthy makes way for a voluptuary, and... | |
| Mark L. Greenberg - 1996 - 224 sayfa
..."wake the purple year" to new life, so that the poet can retire beneath an "oak's thick branches." Beside some water's rushy brink With me the Muse shall...how little are the proud, How indigent the great! Nature would seem to have produced a special vantage-point from which position, paradoxically elevated... | |
| Robert L. Mack - 2000 - 768 sayfa
...both the poet and his muse have already diligently drawn a moral lesson from their own observations: Where'er the oak's thick branches stretch A broader...how little are the proud, How indigent the great! (PTG 50-51) The reader is intended to find the 'moral' articulated in the last three lines here an... | |
| Aaron Santesso - 2006 - 230 sayfa
...bank "glade," a "muse" tells the narrator, "reclin'd in rustic state," of the dangers of ambition: How vain the ardour of the Crowd, How low, how little are the Proud, How indigent the Great! (18-20) We are reminded again of the power of tropes as an engine of change: here they are lifeless;... | |
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