Lo here the place for contemplation made
- DMI number:
- 30465
- First Line:
- Lo here the place for contemplation made
- Last Line:
- If Spenser deign with me to moralize the lay
- Poem Genre / Form:
- Inscription and Sonnet
- Themes:
- Gardens and Poetry / literature / writing[Edmund Spenser]
- Author:
- William Thompson
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- Chalmers (1810) III: 14. Forster (1980): 66.
- First Line:
- At large beneath this floating foliage laid
- Last Line:
- My sweeter Colin Clout outpipes you both at home
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- First Line:
- Beneath an awful gloom a night of shade
- Last Line:
- I faint o softly lay me in his shade
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- First Line:
- Bring hither friend o hither bring
- Last Line:
- And learn at last from Horace to grow wise
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- First Line:
- By yon hills with morning spread
- Last Line:
- Since thou and nature are but one
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- First Line:
- From busy scenes with peace alone retired
- Last Line:
- And hope a fairer paradise on high
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- First Line:
- Hail happy garden happy groves
- Last Line:
- Whom your happiest master loves
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- First Line:
- Here Maro rests beneath the fragrant shade
- Last Line:
- Give me the products of his rural muse
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- First Line:
- Here mighty Milton in the blaze of noon
- Last Line:
- As of the sons of men the greatest thou
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- First Line:
- If he who first the apple sung the fruit
- Last Line:
- Her purple breathing births sweet smiling round
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- First Line:
- Just to thy genius to thy virtues just
- Last Line:
- Graced with a Virgil and an Addison
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- First Line:
- Lo Thomson deigns to grace the bower I made
- Last Line:
- Till nature sickens and the seasons die
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- First Line:
- O skilled thy every reader's breast to warm
- Last Line:
- But dedicate to thine my laurel grove
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- First Line:
- Shall poets dignify my walks and bowers
- Last Line:
- Had yielded nor been turned into a shade
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- First Line:
- The blissful scenes which Virgil's pencil drew
- Last Line:
- And Woodstock and Elysium flourish here
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- First Line:
- What pleasing form commands the lifted eye
- Last Line:
- And next the sacred scriptures bless mankind
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- First Line:
- Who is this thilke old bard which wonneth here
- Last Line:
- And merie be thy heart old Dan Chaucer
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- Title:
- The Poetical Calendar. Vol. VIII. For August. [T146609]
- Page No(s):
- p.97
- Poem Title:
- In Il Spenseroso. On Spenser's Faerie Queene.
- Attribution:
- By William Thompson, M.A. Late Fellow of Queen's College, Oxon.
- Attributed To:
- William Thompson
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