Super Flumina: Angling Observations of a Coarse FishermanJ. Lane, 1905 - 231 sider |
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Side 94
... poets - silverlings in- cluded - Ovid must bear the bell . Take the following piece of advice , does it not shew that the author knew the double - edged un- certainty of the craft ? That if hopes were dupes , fears may be liars ? speaks ...
... poets - silverlings in- cluded - Ovid must bear the bell . Take the following piece of advice , does it not shew that the author knew the double - edged un- certainty of the craft ? That if hopes were dupes , fears may be liars ? speaks ...
Side 97
... poet certainly know much about sweet - water fishes , but one eye is ever upon the frying pan , otherwise we grant that he would elbow out poor Ovid . Nec te puniceo rutilantem viscera salmo Transierim , latæ cuius vaga verbera cauda ...
... poet certainly know much about sweet - water fishes , but one eye is ever upon the frying pan , otherwise we grant that he would elbow out poor Ovid . Nec te puniceo rutilantem viscera salmo Transierim , latæ cuius vaga verbera cauda ...
Side 103
... poet say , was their method ? ) It is better that we should be ruled by means of any of our organs rather than not be ruled at all , and , indeed , we shall never compass the final rout of the spooks of 103 In Dispraise of the Latins.
... poet say , was their method ? ) It is better that we should be ruled by means of any of our organs rather than not be ruled at all , and , indeed , we shall never compass the final rout of the spooks of 103 In Dispraise of the Latins.
Side 115
... poets are to be trusted and , that great genius Anon —him , I mean , who invented so much about us that is admirable - has , not unhappily , voiced the spirit of the thing , in lines not yet set to an equal helpmeet in music . A ...
... poets are to be trusted and , that great genius Anon —him , I mean , who invented so much about us that is admirable - has , not unhappily , voiced the spirit of the thing , in lines not yet set to an equal helpmeet in music . A ...
Side 132
... poetic to carry an armoury grossly combative snaps . The athletic gudgeon is too dark of hue to be a prime bait , but the dace is designed to attract . He spills the light about . He is much in evidence in pikeland , but his saucy ...
... poetic to carry an armoury grossly combative snaps . The athletic gudgeon is too dark of hue to be a prime bait , but the dace is designed to attract . He spills the light about . He is much in evidence in pikeland , but his saucy ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
alder Angler Death angling Arundina Aunt Susan Ausonius bait bank basket better bishop bite brown carp cast catch caught chub Close Season coarse coarse fish colour cousin Hilda creatures creel dace delight despised doubt eels Eleazar fear fellow figwort fisher flies float flower gentle gives grayling green grey gudgeon hand Hippopotamus honourable hook hope jaws John Worlidge Juliana Berners keep Latin leap least light live look Lucretius lure Matthew Arnold Midney minnows mullet never one's Oppian patience perch perhaps pike Plato poet ponds pool poor pound rain red mullets river roach rose round salmon sciri sea fish snap sort spinner splash sport stream sweet swims tackle tail taste tench thee things thou trout water plantain weeds wind worm δὲ καὶ
Populære passager
Side 34 - With the swift pilgrim's daubed nest; The groves already did rejoice In Philomel's triumphing voice, The showers were short, the weather mild. The morning fresh, the evening smiled.
Side 33 - Fresh juice did stir th' embracing vines ; And birds had drawn their valentines. The jealous trout, that low did lie, Rose at a well-dissembled fly ; There stood my Friend, with patient skill, Attending of his trembling quill.
Side 85 - Dear stream! dear bank, where often I Have sate, and pleas'd my pensive eye, Why, since each drop of thy quick store Runs thither, whence it flow's before, Should poor souls fear a shade or night, Who came (sure) from a sea of light?
Side 126 - And nearer to the river's trembling edge, There grew broad flag-flowers, purple prankt with white. And starry river buds among the sedge. And floating water-lilies, broad and bright, Which lit the oak that overhung the hedge With moonlight beams of their own watery light ; And bulrushes, and reeds of sucli deep green As soothed the dazzled eye with sober sheen.
Side 61 - Toward her, then, we looked fearing destruction ; but Scylla meanwhile caught from out my hollow ship six of my company, the hardiest of their hands and the chief in might. And looking into the swift ship to find my men, even then I marked their feet and hands as they were lifted on high, and they cried aloud in their agony, and called me by my name for that last time of all.
Side 33 - And now all Nature seem'd in Love The lusty Sap began to move ; New Juice did stirre th...
Side 55 - All cover'd with a snaring bait, Alas, to tempt thee to thy fate, And dragge thee from the brooke. 0 harmless tenant of the flood, 1 do not wish to spill thy blood, For Nature unto thee Perchance hath given a tender wife, And children dear, to charm thy life, As she hath done for me. Enjoy thy stream, O harmless fish ; And when an angler for his dish, Through gluttony's vile sin, Attempts, a wretch, to pull thee out, God give thee strength, O gentle trout, To pull the raskall in!
Side 205 - The moving Finger writes, and having writ, Moves on ; nor all your piety nor wit Can lure it back to cancel half a line, Nor all your tears wipe out a word of it.
Side 27 - They say the Lion and the Lizard keep The Courts where Jamshyd gloried and drank deep: And Bahram, that great Hunter — the Wild Ass Stamps o'er his Head, but cannot break his Sleep.
Side 34 - Where, for some sturdy football swain, Joan strokes a sillabub or twain. The fields and gardens were beset With tulip, crocus, violet ; And now, though late, the modest rose Did more than half a blush disclose. Thus all look'd gay, all full of cheer, To welcome the new liveried year.