| William Ayre, Edmund Curll - 1745 - 426 pągines
...Pope, what a barren Soil (to me fo) have I been ftriving to produce fomething out of ! Why did I not take your Advice before my writing Fables for the...Duke, not to write them ? Or rather, to write them for fome young Nobleman ? It is my very hard Fate, I muft get nothing, write for them or againft them.... | |
| Ralph Griffiths, George Edward Griffiths - 1757 - 636 pągines
...Dear Pope, whtt a barren foil (tome Ip) have I been ilriving to produce fomething out of! WhycidI noi take your advice, before my writing fables for the...Duke, not to Write them, or rather to write them for fome young nobleman f It is my very hard fate, I mull g« no;hiiig, write for them, or againll them."... | |
| John Gay - 1770 - 216 pągines
...what " a barren foil (to me fo) have I been ftriving to pro" duce fomething out of ! Why did not 1 take your " Advice before my writing fables for the...duke, not " to write them, or rather to write them for fome " young nobleman? It is my hard fate, I muft get " nothing, write for them or againft them." In... | |
| 1797 - 420 pągines
...have I been striving to produce something out " of! Why did I not take your advice before my writ" ing fables for the Duke, not to write them, or rather " to write them for some young nobleman i It is my " hard fate, I must get nothing, wri'e for them or " against them." In this disposition,... | |
| Alexander Chalmers - 1814 - 548 pągines
...stars. There is now (what Milton says in hell) darkness visible. O that I had never known what a court was! Dear Pope, what a barren soil (to me so) have...find him rejecting a proposal, made to him by this last- mentioned friend in 1732, of trying his muse upon the hermitage, then lately built by queen Caroline... | |
| 1819 - 426 pągines
...court was ! Dear Pope, what a barren soil (to me so) have I been striving to make some thing out of !****It is my hard fate, I must get nothing, write for them or against them.' Not all the noble additions to his fame, his fortune, and his friendships, procured him by the unrivalled... | |
| 1834 - 602 pągines
...occasion are vividly expressed ma letter to Pope some time afterwards, wherein he says, " Why did I not take your advice, before my writing Fables for the duke, not to write them ; or rather to write them fur some young nobleman ? It is my very hard fate, — I must get nothing, write lor them or against... | |
| 1839 - 742 pągines
...brother poet, " what a barren soil I have been striving to produce something out of! Why did I not take your advice before my writing fables for the...is my hard fate, — I must get nothing, write for or against them." Poor Gay ! Too well he knew, as Spenser so feelingly sings in his Mother Hubbard's... | |
| Charles Mackay - 1840 - 426 pągines
...brother poet, " what a barren soil I have been striving to produce something out of! Why did I not take your advice before my writing fables for the...is my hard fate, — I must get nothing, write for or against them." Poor Gay ! Too well he knew, as Spenser so feelingly sings in his Mother Hubbard's... | |
| John Heneage Jesse - 1843 - 492 pągines
...striving to produce something out of? Why did I not take your advice, before my writing Fables for a Duke, not to write them; or rather to write them for some young nobleman? It is my very hard fate, I must get nothing, write for them or against them." Gay died at the house of the Duke... | |
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