The English Parnassus, or, A helpe to English poesie containing a collection of all rhyming monosyllables, the choicest epithets, and phrases : with some general forms upon all occasions, subjects, and theams, alphabeticaly digested : together with a short institution to English poesie, by way of a preface / by Joshua Poole.

About this Item

Title
The English Parnassus, or, A helpe to English poesie containing a collection of all rhyming monosyllables, the choicest epithets, and phrases : with some general forms upon all occasions, subjects, and theams, alphabeticaly digested : together with a short institution to English poesie, by way of a preface / by Joshua Poole.
Author
Poole, Josua, fl. 1632-1646.
Publication
London :: Printed for Tho. Johnson,
1657.
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Subject terms
English poetry.
Epithets.
English language -- Rhyme -- Dictionaries.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A55357.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The English Parnassus, or, A helpe to English poesie containing a collection of all rhyming monosyllables, the choicest epithets, and phrases : with some general forms upon all occasions, subjects, and theams, alphabeticaly digested : together with a short institution to English poesie, by way of a preface / by Joshua Poole." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A55357.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 1, 2024.

Pages

Parnassus.
The Muses forked hill. With two tops reaching to the skie, Twixt east and west equally distant lies. To Bacchus and Apollo's Deities Sacred, to whom in mixed sacrifice, The Teban wives at Delphos solemnize Their trietericks, this one hill alone Appeard when all the world was overflowne, And stood as middle twixt the earth and skie. Young Phaebus there with shafts unused slew The speckled serpent, that in wait long lay His banish' mother, great with child to sly. Where all the Muses sit in soangled ranks, Tuning their ditties on the flowry bankes. There springs the Poets fount, Where they to drench their ravisht lips are wont.
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