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The following 15 texts (sorted by results) match your query "then" (24 results):

  1. [Translation from Statius, Thebaid VI 646-88, 704-24]  (4 results)
              1    Then thus the king: 'Whoe'er the quoit can wield,
            16    Then thus: 'Ye Argive flower, ye warlike band,
            42    Then grasped its weight, elusive of his hold;
            67    Then, with a tempest's whirl and wary eye,

  2. [Imitated] From Propertius. Lib: 2: Eleg: 1.  (3 results)
            47    Then, while the vaulted skies loud Ios rend,
            99    When then my fates that breath they gave shall claim,
          105    Then to my quiet urn awhile draw near,

  3. [Translation from Dante, Inferno Canto xxxiii 1-78]  (3 results)
            52    And fastening bolts. Then on my children's eyes
            78    About among their cold remains (for then
            82    He finished; then with unrelenting eye

  4. Agrippina, a Tragedy  (2 results)
            47    The noble quarry. Gods! then was the time
            48    To shrink from danger; fear might then have worn

  5. The Characters of the Christ-Cross Row, By a Critic, To Mrs —  (2 results)
            10    Then one faint glimpse of Queen Elizabeth;
            41    Pippin or peach, then perches on the spray,

  6. [The Alliance of Education and Government. A Fragment]  (1 result)
            38    Say then, through ages by what fate confined

  7. The Candidate  (1 result)
              9    Then he shambles and straddles so oddly, I fear—

  8. The Descent of Odin. An Ode  (1 result)
            80    Then I leave thee to repose.

  9. The Fatal Sisters. An Ode  (1 result)
              P    who was then making war on his father-in-law Brian, King of

  10. Imitated from Propertius, Lib: 3: Eleg: 5:  (1 result)
            19    Then let me rightly spell of nature's ways.

  11. Lines on the Accession of George III  (1 result)
              4    Then sing and sigh,

  12. Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College  (1 result)
            72    Then whirl the wretch from high,

  13. Ode on the Death of a Favourite Cat, Drowned in a Tub of Gold Fishes  (1 result)
            20    A whisker first and then a claw,

  14. On L[or]d H[olland']s Seat near M[argat]e, K[en]t  (1 result)
            22        Then had we seen proud London's hated walls:

  15. William Shakespeare to Mrs Anne, Regular Servant to the Revd Mr Precentor of York  (1 result)
            13    If then he wreak on me his wicked will,

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