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 8, 2024.

Pages

Cock.
The watchful-bird, crest-people, featherd King, The peasants trusty clock, Aurora's trumpetter, The mornings watch. The feathered Bellman of the night The feathered Prophet of approaching light. The Bell-man of the morn Summoning, light up with his bugle horn, The native Bell-man of the night, Startles the Moon, and wakes the drowsie morn. The bird that warned Peter of his fall. The trumpet of the day, That with his lofty, and shrill-sounding throat Awakes the day, and makes the erring ghosts Hast to their confines, The husband Cock looks out, and strait is sped Meeting his wife, which brings her feather-bed, That wakes the morn, With bird of flesh, and mouth of horn.
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