The Poets Pleasaunce Or Garden of All Sorts of Pleasant Flowers Which Our P

Cover The Poets Pleasaunce Or Garden of All Sorts of Pleasant Flowers Which Our P
The Poets Pleasaunce Or Garden of All Sorts of Pleasant Flowers Which Our P
Eden Warwick
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Thompson correctly describes the haunt of the nightingale, which, it has been observed, prefers the dingles where the Cowslip grows profusely : the nightingale's harmonious woe, In dewy even-tide, when Cowslips droop Their sleepy heads, and languish in the breeze. " Chatterton says, " The nesh young Cowslip bendeth with the dew. " Mickle, " Modest Cowslips deck the streamlet's side ; " and " Wild by the banks the bashful Cowslips spread. ' Smart wishes indolently to recline " Near some Cowslip-...painted mead ; There let me doze out the dull hours, And under me let Flora spread A sofa of her softest flowers. ' He also gives a fuller description than the poets of his time usually condescend to bestow on flowers : " Cowslips, like topazes, that shine Close by the silver serpentine, Rude rustics, which assert the bowers, Amidst the educated flowers. " Thomas Warton tempts us to the forest-fringed vale, Where Cowslips, clad in mantle meek, Nod their tall heads to breezes weak. " So that it is not quite true, as the same poet observes, that the Cowslip paints the green With unregarded grace.

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