“Poetic trifles from solitary rambles whilst chewing the cud of sweet and bitter fancy.. now written from memory, confined to fourteen lines, this seemed best adapted to the unity of sentiment, the verse flowed in unpremeditated harmony as my ear directed but are far from being mere elegiac couplets.”
From Preface to The Poetical Works of William Lisle Bowles, Vol. 1 - With Memoir, Critical Dissertation, and Explanatory Notes by George Gilfillan (1855) Ballantyne & Co , Edinburgh , kindle ebook edition ASIN B0082VAFKO.
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William Lisle Bowles 3
English priest, poet and critic 1762–1850Related quotes

Napoleon the Little (1852), Book V, V
Napoleon the Little (1852)

“No good water comes from a muddy spring. No sweet fruit comes from a bitter seed.”
Letter to the Young Women of Malolos
Introduction Contemporary Verse, Ed Kenneth Allott, Penguin Books, London 1950

“Sweet is the god but still I am
in agony and far from my strength.”
The Willis Barnstone translations, Dream
“Blest pair! if aught my verse avail,
No day shall make your memory fail
From off the heart of time.”
Source: Translations, The Aeneid of Virgil (1866), Book IX, p. 324