The Hop-garden: A Didactic PoemH.P. Silvester, 1799 - 118 pages |
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Page 32
... gladly return to their refpective homes , crowned with hop - clufters , and bearing wallets filled with fruit - good policy of the Planter in thus befriending them . Conclufion of the Didactic Poem . THE THE HOP - GARDEN , A DIDACTIC ...
... gladly return to their refpective homes , crowned with hop - clufters , and bearing wallets filled with fruit - good policy of the Planter in thus befriending them . Conclufion of the Didactic Poem . THE THE HOP - GARDEN , A DIDACTIC ...
Page 51
... gladly giv'n By pitying Cottagers ; themselves , perchance , To ask the boon of Charity constrain'd . Not filver theirs nor gold ; yet of their store , With no reluctant temper , they impart ; D 2 And And He who noted the poor Widow's ...
... gladly giv'n By pitying Cottagers ; themselves , perchance , To ask the boon of Charity constrain'd . Not filver theirs nor gold ; yet of their store , With no reluctant temper , they impart ; D 2 And And He who noted the poor Widow's ...
Page 54
... gladly heard , To You are from the Book of Life rehears'd ; Truths wond'rous , and of import vaft to all . There learn ye much amaz'd ( as much ye ought ) That He who reigns in heav'n had , when on earth , Not where to lay his head ...
... gladly heard , To You are from the Book of Life rehears'd ; Truths wond'rous , and of import vaft to all . There learn ye much amaz'd ( as much ye ought ) That He who reigns in heav'n had , when on earth , Not where to lay his head ...
Page 60
... gladly hail . ' Wak'd by the cock's fhrill clarion , up they spring ; And , ready - vefted , joyous fally forth , Grateful to Him who gave them balmy reft , Nor mindless of a bleffing for the friend Whose ev'ning bounty and whose ...
... gladly hail . ' Wak'd by the cock's fhrill clarion , up they spring ; And , ready - vefted , joyous fally forth , Grateful to Him who gave them balmy reft , Nor mindless of a bleffing for the friend Whose ev'ning bounty and whose ...
Page 73
... Gladly prepare the picker - train to hail ? Happy , as thence to wander , they return ; And , Herefordia ! leave , without a figh , Thy fruitful orchards , and thy gardens gay , Where Pleasure , late , the circling hours beguil'd . 680 ...
... Gladly prepare the picker - train to hail ? Happy , as thence to wander , they return ; And , Herefordia ! leave , without a figh , Thy fruitful orchards , and thy gardens gay , Where Pleasure , late , the circling hours beguil'd . 680 ...
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Common terms and phrases
affail bear beftow beſt bev'rage blaſt Bleffing bleſs'd bluſh boaft boaſt breaſt bright Britannia's Britiſh Cauſe charms cloſe cluſters cold courſe cryſtal Cyder deftin'd deftructive Deſcriptions didactic e'en effence Engliſh Erft ev'ry fafe fame faſt fave feafon fhall fhou'd fing firſt flain fleep flow'rs fmile focial foft foft'ring foil fole fome fong foon foul Friendſhip fubject fuch fwain fweet Garden gen'rous Gentleman's Magazine gladly glebe gueſts harmleſs Heav'n Herefordshire hoary HOP-GARDEN hop-pickers Hop's landſcape laſt lefs lib'ral Love Malvern mildew moffy moft moſt Mufe Muſe nature ne'er neighb'ring o'er obfervant Ofmund peſt plains Planter plants Pleaſure Poem poles poor pow'r purpoſe purſe purſue Refpect rife rude ruftic ſcene ſeaſon ſhall ſmall ſmiling ſpace ſpirit ſports ſpread ſpring ſtore ſtorm taſks tears thee thefe theſe thine thofe thoſe thou thro Thyſelf toil Tow'rs train trees uſe ween whofe whoſe winds woods
Popular passages
Page 110 - Cold on Canadian hills, or Minden's plain, Perhaps that parent wept her soldier slain — Bent o'er her babe, her eye dissolved in dew, The big drops, mingling with the milk he drew, Gave the sad presage of his future years, The child of misery baptized in tears.
Page 117 - I rose before daybreak: when I came into the enclosures, I found the stubbles and clover-grounds matted all over with a thick coat of cobweb, in the meshes of which a copious and heavy dew hung so plentifully that the whole face of the country seemed, as it were, covered with two or three setting-nets drawn one over another. When the dogs attempted to hunt, their eyes were so blinded and hoodwinked that they could not proceed, but were obliged...
Page 78 - The jointed herbage fhoots ; th' unfallow'd glebe Yearly o'ercomes the granaries with ftore Of golden wheat, the ftrength of human life, Lo, on auxiliary poles, the Hops Afcending fpiral, rang'd in meet array ! Lo, how the arable with barley-grain Stands thick, o'erfhadow'd, to the thirfty hind Tranfporting profpeft ! thefe, as modern ufe Ordains, infus'd, an auburn drink compofe, Wholefome, of deathlefs fame.
Page 66 - See, see, unsummon'd, blithesome now advance The willing Pickers to the Garden's bound ; Where, plac'd to meet the moisture-drinking ray, They plant the Crib capacious. Soon commence Their various tasks. All emulous to please...
Page 117 - ... copious and heavy dew hung so plentifully, that the whole face of the country seemed, as it were, covered with two or three setting nets, drawn one over another. When the dogs attempted to hunt, their eyes were so blinded and hoodwinked that they could not proceed, but were obliged to lie down and scrape the incumbrances from their faces with their forefeet.
Page 110 - Who, then, no more by golden prospects led, Of the poor Indian begg'da leafy bed. Cold on Canadian hills, or Minden's plain, Perhaps that parent mourn'd her soldier slain : Bent o'er her babe, her eye...
Page 116 - It is probable that fome benefit might be produced by planting a fmall number of male Hops in each Garden (for the Hop is of that order of vegetables which bear the male and female flowers on different plants.) The advantage of this practice is experimentally proved with regard to the...
Page 97 - To minifter; but, to th' exterior-croud Of fleek church-wardens and church-tending dames. Incomprehennbly refin'd and deep ; Expofing fchifms and herefies long time Refuted — yet frefh broach'd, — unwary flocks To fever from their fhepherd ; flocks, too fond Of novel food, — not heeding whence deriv'd ; Whether from Salem's Mount, with deathlefs flow'rs And ever-fpringing pafturage adorn'd; Or whether from the rank and treach'rous fens 280 Whence many an ignis fatuus moots up To lead unftable...
Page 99 - Fafhion difplays, inconftant as the moon. Them to allure, in vain does chymic art For human veftments multiply its dyes. One mode of drefs contents them; and but few 310 The colours of their choice, — the gaudy fhunn'd, . E'en by the gentle fifterhood.
Page 99 - E'en by the gentle fifterhood. In youth, The rofes vivid hue their cheeks, alone, Wear, dimpling, — fhaded by a bonnet plain, White as the cygnet's bofom,— jetty black As raven's wing, — or, if a tint it bear, 'Tis what the...