 | Emerson R. Marks - 1998 - 428 pages
...as in the exquisite lines from Pope's "To Burlington": Another age shall see the golden Ear Km brown the Slope, and nod on the Parterre, Deep Harvests bury all his pride has planned, And laughing Ceres reassume the land. The association of propriety and elegance is explicit... | |
 | Pat Rogers - 2007
...by Pope by which Timon's corrupt power can be overborne, except by some undefined process of Nature. Another age shall see the golden Ear Imbrown the Slope,...on the Parterre, Deep Harvests bury all his pride had plann'd, And laughing Ceres re-assume the land. (Burlington, 173-6) Past and future are imaginatively... | |
 | Erik Bond - 2007 - 306 pages
...us into a different future. Pope continues to employ Horace's question-and-answer motif during this prophecy: Another age shall see the golden Ear Imbrown the Slope, and nod on the Parterre, Deep Harvest bury all his pride has plann'd, And laughing Ceres re-assume the land. Who then shall grace,... | |
 | Alexander Pope - 1926 - 312 pages
...cloth'd, the Hungry fed ; Health to himself, and to his Infants bread 170 His charitable Vanity supplies. Another age shall see the golden Ear Imbrown the Slope, and nod on the Parterre, Deep Harvest bury all his pride has plann'd, 175 And laughing Ceres reassume the land. Who then shall grace,... | |
 | Henry Mills Alden, Frederick Lewis Allen, Lee Foster Hartman, Thomas Bucklin Wells - 1857 - 892 pages
...fulfilling Pope's prediction, in his Essay " On the Use of Iliches :" " Another age shall see Hie golden car Imbrown the slope, and nod on the parterre ; Deep harvests bury all his pride has plauned, And laughing Ceres reafi«ume the land." In the crypt of his chapel, which is now in the last... | |
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