Laconics: Or, The Best Words of the Best Authors, Band 3T. Boys, 1826 - 360 Seiten |
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Seite 19
... to cease , Stop you my mouth , with still , still kissing me . Sir P. Sidney . LXXIII . My brain , methinks , is like an hour - glass , Wherein m ' imaginations run like sands , Filling up time ; but then are turn'd and turn'd LACONICS .
... to cease , Stop you my mouth , with still , still kissing me . Sir P. Sidney . LXXIII . My brain , methinks , is like an hour - glass , Wherein m ' imaginations run like sands , Filling up time ; but then are turn'd and turn'd LACONICS .
Seite 20
... turn'd and turn'd : So that I know not what to stay upon , And less to put in act . LXXIV . Ben . Jonson . Who can tell whether learning may not even weaken invention , in a man that has great advantages from nature , and birth ...
... turn'd and turn'd : So that I know not what to stay upon , And less to put in act . LXXIV . Ben . Jonson . Who can tell whether learning may not even weaken invention , in a man that has great advantages from nature , and birth ...
Seite 21
... turn to frost ; and ere we can Know how our cheek turns pale and wan , Or how a silver snow Springs there where jet did grow , Our fading spring is in dull winter lost . LXXIX . Mayne . It is a very poor , though common , pretence to ...
... turn to frost ; and ere we can Know how our cheek turns pale and wan , Or how a silver snow Springs there where jet did grow , Our fading spring is in dull winter lost . LXXIX . Mayne . It is a very poor , though common , pretence to ...
Seite 23
... turn loose upon the public three or four thousand naked wretches , corrupted by the habits - debased by the igno- miny of a prison . If the creditor had a right to those carcases , as a natural claim for his property , I am sure we have ...
... turn loose upon the public three or four thousand naked wretches , corrupted by the habits - debased by the igno- miny of a prison . If the creditor had a right to those carcases , as a natural claim for his property , I am sure we have ...
Seite 46
... turns its own executioner , and revenges its misfortunes on its own head . It refuses to live under disappointments and crosses , and chooses rather not to be at all , than to be without the thing which it hath once imagined necessary ...
... turns its own executioner , and revenges its misfortunes on its own head . It refuses to live under disappointments and crosses , and chooses rather not to be at all , than to be without the thing which it hath once imagined necessary ...
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Beaumont and Fletcher beauty Ben Jonson better Brown Burke charms Charron Churchill Cicero Clarendon court creature death Defence of Poesy delight divine doth Dryden ears earth Elizium esteem ev'ry evil Evremond eyes fair fall fame fancy fear flowers folly fools fortune friends give Goldsmith grace grow happy hate hath heart heaven honour humour king knowledge labour laugh learning liberty live look Lord Bacon man's Marvell men's Milton mind nature never o'er Overbury passion pleasure poor praise pride Raleigh reason rich Roscommon Samson Agonistes Saville Sejanus sense Shakspeare shame shew shine Sidney Sir W soul Spenser spirit spleen strong madness sweet taste Tatler Temple thee things thou art thought thro thyself Tom Brown tongue true truth unto vice virtue whilst wind wisdom wise woman words wretched Young