Apollo there, with aim so clever, Stretches his leaden bow for ever; And there, without the pow'r to fly, Stands fix'da tip-toe Mercury. Poems - Página 50por Robert Lloyd - 1762 - 277 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Samuel Carter Hall - 1837 - 448 páginas
...; Apollo there, with aim so clever, Stretches his leaden bow for ever ; And there without the power to fly, Stands fix'da tip-toe Mercury. The Villa thus completely grac'd, All own that Thrifty has a taste; And Madam's female friends and coufcins, . .With Common-council-men by dozens, •Flock every... | |
| Henry Austin Dobson - 1894 - 328 páginas
...Here squabby Cupids take their places, With Venus, and the clumsy Graces : Apollo there, with aim so clever, Stretches his leaden bow for ever ; And there,...the pow'r to fly, Stands fix'da tip-toe Mercury.' How long Roubillac laboured in Cheere's leaden Pantheon is uncertain ; but it is with Cheere that tradition... | |
| Robert Lloyd - 1926 - 56 páginas
...Here squabby Cupids take their places, With Venus, and the clumsy Graces : Apollo there, with aim so clever, Stretches his leaden bow for ever ; And there,...without the pow'r to fly, Stands fix'da tip-toe Mercury. As Lloyd wrote this poem 170 years ago, it is presumable that the lady has died ; yet if no confusion... | |
| Philip Ayres - 1997 - 308 páginas
...Here squabby Cupids take their places, With Venus, and the clumsy Graces: Apollo there, with aim so clever, Stretches his leaden bow for ever; And there, without the pow'r to fly, Stands fix'da tip-toe Mercury.139 As Wesley intuited, however, their uses and implications might sometimes run a little deeper... | |
| 1768 - 814 páginas
...clever, sjtrnches his Iciden bow for etcrj 491 And there, without the pow'r to fly. Stands fix'da tip-tor Mercury, The villa thus completely grac'd, All own,...Thrifty has a tafte; And madam's female friends, and coiUjnj, With common-council men, by dozens, Flock ev'ry Sunday to the feat. To flare about ihcm, and... | |
| James Roach - 1793 - 274 páginas
...take their places-, With Venus, and the clumfy Graces ; Apollo there, with aim fo clever, Stretehes his leaden bow for ever ; And there, without the pow'r to fly, Stands fix'da tip-toe Mereury. The villa thus completely grac'd^ AH own, that Thrifly has a tafle ; And Madam's female friends... | |
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