line_txt
stringlengths 22
71
| score
float64 0
11
|
|---|---|
OH nymph divine! as opening morning fair!
| 3
|
Bright as the sun! yet lighter than the air!
| 1
|
Yet more uncertain than the whistling winds!
| 1
|
Where shall we find, or fix your resting place?
| 0
|
Now here, now there, eluding still the chase.
| 2
|
OH it's in vain, as ancient proverbs say,
| 0
|
To seek a needle in a load of hay;
| 0
|
As vain it is to fix your certain bound:
| 1
|
And yet I sought you where soft pleasure dwells,
| 1
|
Pleasure, thou soft retreat! but hard to find,
| 2
|
And opening only to the patient mind.
| 3
|
Through various alleys, perilous and dark,
| 3
|
My way I shape, and every footstep mark;
| 1
|
Lest through some passage, elbowed to and fro,
| 3
|
Like a small skiff my little bark was hurled,
| 3
|
Tossed to and fro amid a laughing world;
| 0
|
Yet, spite of these, I boldly ventured forth,
| 1
|
And bid defiance to the surly North.
| 1
|
By You, my Polar Star, awhile I steer,
| 1
|
There, there I land, no more of winds the sport,
| 2
|
And found the gallant Lovelace safe in port.
| 1
|
His reckoning failing, and his compass lost,
| 1
|
Some hospitable shore at length in view,
| 3
|
Pushes to land, with all his jovial crew:
| 4
|
What Charms You have, from what high Race You sprung,
| 1
|
Have been the pleasing Subjects of my Song:
| 1
|
Unskilled and young, yet something still I writ,
| 0
|
What greater Theme Your Music can produce;
| 1
|
My babbling Praises I repeat no more;
| 2
|
But hear, rejoice, stand silent, and adore.
| 2
|
The Persians thus, first gazing on the Sun,
| 2
|
But, as his Power was known, their Thoughts were raised;
| 3
|
And soon They worshipped, what at first They praised.
| 0
|
That as in Birth, in Beauty You excel,
| 1
|
The Muse might dictate, and the Poet tell:
| 2
|
Your Art no other Art can speak; and You,
| 1
|
To show how well You play, must play anew:
| 0
|
Your Music's Power Your Music must disclose;
| 2
|
For what Light is, it's only Light that shows.
| 0
|
Strange Force of Harmony, that thus controls
| 2
|
While with it's utmost Art Your Sex could move
| 1
|
Our Wonder only, or at best our Love:
| 1
|
You far above Both these Your GOD did place;
| 2
|
That Your high Power might worldly Thoughts destroy;
| 5
|
That with Your Numbers You our Zeal might raise,
| 1
|
And, like Himself, communicate Your Joy.
| 0
|
When to Your Native Heaven You shall repair,
| 0
|
And with Your Presence crown the Blessings there;
| 2
|
Your Lute may wind it's Strings but little higher,
| 0
|
To tune their Notes to that immortal Quire.
| 0
|
Your Art is perfect here: Your Numbers do,
| 1
|
More than our Books, make the rude Atheist know,
| 5
|
As in some Piece, while Luke his Skill expressed,
| 0
|
A cunning Angel came, and drew the rest:
| 0
|
So, when You play, some Godhead does impart
| 1
|
Harmonious Aid; Divinity helps Art:
| 4
|
Some Cherub finishes what You begun,
| 1
|
And to a Miracle improves a Tune.
| 2
|
To burning Rome when frantic Nero played,
| 0
|
Viewing that Face, no more He had surveyed
| 1
|
The raging Flames; but struck with strange Surprise,
| 0
|
Confessed them less than Those of Anna's Eyes:
| 1
|
But had He heard Thy Lute, He soon had found
| 0
|
And from Destruction called the rising Town:
| 1
|
Malice to Music had been forced to yield;
| 2
|
With the united Glories of his Line,
| 2
|
Not only Royal Tears adorn his Urn,
| 0
|
But you have taught the Subjects all to mourn:
| 1
|
Your melting Lines, make conscious Passion vent
| 1
|
Soft are thy strains as his once moving Tongue,
| 2
|
Fond Venus lose was less divinely Sung;
| 1
|
The weeping Nymphs, all throw their Cypress down,
| 1
|
You from whom Kings such Glories do receive,
| 1
|
Dismissed at length, they break through all delay
| 0
|
To tempt the dangers of the doubtful way;
| 1
|
Whose walls along the neighbouring sea extend.
| 2
|
Nor yet in prospect rose the distant shore,
| 0
|
Scarce the hoarse waves from far were heard to roar,
| 3
|
When thwart the road a river rolled its flood
| 0
|
Tempestuous, and all further course withstood:
| 2
|
The wondrous sage: vigorous he seemed in years,
| 4
|
Awful his mien; low as his feet there flows
| 2
|
Against the stream the waves secure he trod,
| 0
|
And winter binds the floods in icy chains,
| 0
|
Fearless in long excursion loves to glide,
| 2
|
So moved the seer, but on no hardened plain:
| 2
|
The river boiled beneath and rushed towards the main.
| 0
|
Where fixed in wonder stood the warlike pair
| 1
|
His course he turned and thus relieved their care:
| 0
|
' Vast, OH my friends, and difficult the toil
| 2
|
To seek your hero in a distant soil!
| 0
|
No common helps, no common guide, you need,
| 2
|
Art it requires and more than winged speed.
| 2
|
What length of sea remains, what various lands,
| 2
|
Oceans unknown, inhospitable sands!
| 3
|
For adverse fate the captive chief has hurled
| 1
|
Beyond the confines of our narrow world.
| 2
|
Great things and full of wonder in your ears
| 1
|
I shall unfold; but first dismiss your fears,
| 0
|
Nor doubt with me to tread the downward road
| 1
|
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.