
LEWESDON HILL.
LEWESDON HILL.
NOTES.
POEMS.
INSCRIBED BENEATH THE PICTURE OF AN ASS.
ODE TO THE LYRIC MUSE. SPOKEN IN THE THEATRE AT THE INSTALLATION OF LORD NORTH, CHANCELLOR OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD.
VERSES INTENDED TO HAVE BEEN SPOKEN IN THE THEATRE TO THE DUKE OF PORTLAND, AT HIS INSTALLATION AS CHANCELLOR OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD, IN THE YEAR 1793.
ON THE DEATH OF CAPTAIN COOK.
ELEGY TO THE MEMORY OF DR. W. HAYES, PROFESSOR OF MUSIC IN THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD.
THE WORLD. INTENDED AS AN APOLOGY FOR NOT WRITING. BY A LADY.
A walk up Lewesdon Hill on a bright May morning opens the collection, inviting listeners to share the poet’s reverent view of the Dorset landscape. The verse moves from the concrete details of the hill’s shape and the sea‑marks that guide sailors to broader meditations on nature’s grandeur and the human spirit’s search for calm. The poet’s voice blends pastoral observation with a reflective, almost devotional tone, making the hill a doorway to larger, timeless ideas.
Beyond the title piece, the volume gathers a lively assortment of shorter works—odes to muses, elegies for lost friends, sonnets that echo Petrarch, and lively epigrams on contemporary events. Classical allusions appear in translations of Lucretius and Greek inscriptions, while occasional poems celebrate academic ceremonies, political moments, and personal dedications. The accompanying notes illuminate obscure references, offering a helpful guide for modern ears without detracting from the poems’ lyrical charm.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (112K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United Kingdom: John Murray, 1827.
Credits
Bryan Ness and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2022-08-23
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1745–1829
An Oxford public orator, clergyman, and poet, he is best remembered for the descriptive poem Lewesdon Hill. His life carried him from a carpenter’s household in Berkshire to the literary and academic circles of late Georgian England.
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