| John Milton - 1801 - 396 pągines
...inundation rise Above the highest hills : then shall this mount Of Paradise by might of waves be mov'd 830 Out of his place, push'd by the horned flood, With...spoil'd, and trees adrift, Down the great river to the opening gulf, And there take root an island salt and bare, The haunt of seals, and ores, and sea-mews... | |
| Alexander Chalmers - 1802 - 600 pągines
...giving it a place in this paper. ' —Then shall this mount Of Paradise, by might of waves, be niov'd Out of his place, push'd by the horned flood ; With...spoil'd, and trees adrift Down the great river to th' opening gulf, And there take root ; an island salt and bare, The haunt of seals and ores and sea-mews'... | |
| Joseph Addison - 1804 - 578 pągines
...of waves be moy'd -t • ' • ' i Out of his place, push'd by the horned flood, ; , , .',. j \Viih all his verdure spoil'd, and trees adrift, Down the great river to the op'hing gulf, And there take root an island salt and bare, , ' The haunt of seals, and ores and sea-mews... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1805 - 434 pągines
...the word clang is here used adjectively, as in the Paradise Lost, B. XI, v. 834, and not as a verb. "——an island salt and bare, " The haunt of seals, and ores, and sea-mews clang." T. Warton. I believe Mr. Warton is mistaken. Clang, as a substantive, is used in The Noble Gentleman... | |
| E H. Seymour - 1805 - 504 pągines
...as Mr. Steevens has sufficiently shewn: but, in the very instance produced from Paradise Lost— " An island salt and bare, '* The haunt of seals and ores, and sea mews' clang—" Clang is evidently a substantive :—An island, the resort of seals and ores, and... | |
| Thomas Warton - 1807 - 354 pągines
...in the universal deluge. — — — Then shall this mount Of Paradise, by might of waves be mov'd Out of his place, push'd by the horned flood, With...spoil'd, and trees adrift, Down the great river to the opening gulf; And there take root, an iland salt and bare, The haunt of seals, and ores, and seaw-mews... | |
| John Milton - 1807 - 514 pągines
...inundation rise Above the highest hills ; then shall this mount Of Paradise by might of waves be mov'd 830 Out of his place, push'd by the horned flood With...spoil'd, and trees adrift, Down the great river to the opening gulph, And there take root an island salt and hare, The haunt of seals, and ores, and sea-mews... | |
| Thomas Warton - 1807 - 354 pągines
...in the universal deluge. — — — Then shall this mount Of Paradise, by might of waves be mov'd Out of his place, push'd by the horned flood, With all his verdure spoil'il, and trees adrift, Down the great river to the opening gulf; And there take root, an iland... | |
| Alexander Chalmers - 1808 - 382 pągines
...horned flood; With all his verdure spoil'd, and trees adrift Down the great river to th' opening giilf, And there take root; an island salt and bare, The...and ores and sea-mews' clang.' The transition which the poet makes from the vi. sion of the deluge, to the concern it occasioned in Adam, is exquisitely... | |
| Alexander Chalmers - 1810 - 388 pągines
...horned flood ; With all his verdure spoil'd, and trees adrift Down the great river to tl)' opening gulf, And there take root ; an island salt and bare, The haunt of seals and ores and sea-mews' clang.9 The transition which the poet makes from the vision of the deluge, to the concern it occasioned... | |
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