| John Aikin - 1843 - 830 頁
...maiter may betmy their art: Time, if we use ill-chosen stone, Soon brings a well-built palace down. in bliss unknown: (Nature, whose dictates to no other...seek they find :) Wise is her present ; she connects The beauties, which adorn'd that age, The shining subjects of his rage, Hoping they should immortal... | |
| 1843 - 592 頁
...in a daily-changing tongue? While they are new envy prevails, And as that dies our language fails. Poets that lasting marble seek Must carve in Latin...language grows. And, like the tide, our work o'erflows." We cannot, however, expect any language to remain for long in the same state ; new words must be ever... | |
| 1850 - 602 頁
...France. Waller, in condemnation of the very language that has preserved his name, thanklessly wrote — " Poets that lasting marble seek, Must carve in Latin or in Greek." Milton, again, was content with these British islands as his world ; yet even he did all he could to... | |
| Eliphalet L. Rice - 1846 - 432 頁
...matter may betray their art : Time, if we use ill-chosen stone, Soon brings a well-built palace down. Poets that lasting marble seek, , Must carve in Latin,...only boast, The glory of his numbers lost! Years have defaced his matchless strain, And yet he did not sing in vain. The beauties which adorn'd that age,... | |
| 1848 - 780 頁
...two centuries ago, an English poet thus complained of the instability of tie English tongue : — " Poets that lasting marble seek, Must carve in Latin...language grows, And like the tide our work o'erflows." ledge and inquiry has been indefinitely enlarged. The boundaries of the old sciences have advanced.... | |
| 1848 - 778 頁
...two centuries ago, an English poet thus complained of the instability of the English tongue : — " Poets that lasting marble seek, Must carve in Latin...sand, our language grows, And like the tide our work overflows." ledge and inquiry has been indefinitely enlarged. The boundaries of the old sciences have... | |
| 1848 - 786 頁
...two centuries ago, an English poet thus complained of Ihe instability of tse English tongue: — " Poets that lasting marble seek, Must carve in Latin or in Greek : We write in aand, our language grows, And like the tide our work o'erflows." ledge and inquiry has been indefinitely... | |
| 1848 - 792 頁
...the instability of t:e English tongue : — " Poets that lasting marble seek, Must carve in Latin cr in Greek : We write in sand, our language grows, And like the tide our work o'erfluws." ledge and inquiry has been indefinitely enlarged. The boundaries of the old sciences have... | |
| Alexander Crawford Lindsay Crawford - 1849 - 540 頁
...the English and Scottish dialects seemed to justify the creed so beautifully expressed by Waller, " Poets that lasting marble seek Must carve in Latin...language grows, And, like the tide, our work o'erflows." Even on the few Scottish writers who wisely dissented from this doctrine, and foresaw the glorious... | |
| 1850 - 602 頁
...France. Waller, in condemnation of the very language that has preserved his name, thanklessly wrote — " Poets that lasting marble seek, Must carve in Latin or in Greek." Milton, again, was content with these British islands as his world ; yet even he did all he could to... | |
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