Poems From the Portuguese of Luis De Camoens With Remarks On His Life And Writ

Cover Poems From the Portuguese of Luis De Camoens With Remarks On His Life And Writ
Poems From the Portuguese of Luis De Camoens With Remarks On His Life And Writ
Lus De Cames
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Who kindly listen'd to his tale of woes. — 131 Be generous still — his little all receive. All that a Poet's humble hands can give ; Young violets that boast celestial blue, And budding roses, newly dipt in dew !
" By jealous Tithon, '' &c. The tears of Au- rora are frequently mentioned by poets, but it was reserved for Phineas Fletcher to give a natural explication of them — " Aurora from old Tithon's frostie bed, " (Cold wintrie wither'd Tithon) earlie creepes, " Her cheek with grief was pale
..., with anger red, " Out of her window close she blushing peepes, " Her weeping eyes in pearled dew she steepes, " Casting what sportlesse nights she ever led. " ECLOGUE VII.
( The Prize. ) 132 CANZON. P. 67.
IMITATED FROM THE XXXVt. SON. OF THE SECOND CENTURY.
The tree to which these lines are addressed !^eems from the description to have been the Durio. It is a species of apple-tree, which grows to an immense size, and to the fruit of which that quality is attributed which the ancients formerly assigned to the Lotos.


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