| Alexander Pope - 1824 - 84 Seiten
...190 Whose life is healthful, and whose conscience cla»r, Because he wants a thousand pounds a year. Honour and shame from no condition rise ; Act well your part, there all the honour lies. Fortune in men has some small difference made, 19P One flaunt in rags, one flutters in brocade ; The... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1825 - 536 Seiten
...190 Whose life is healthful, and whose conscience clear, Because he wants a thousand pounds a-year. Honour and shame from no condition rise ; Act well your part, there all the honour lies. Fortune in men has some small difference made, One flaunts in rags, one flutters in brocade ; The cobbler... | |
| Jehoshaphat Aspin - 1825 - 330 Seiten
...honour and real heroism. Our poet Pope, you know, very forcibly expresses this in few words : — ' Honour and shame from no condition rise, ' Act well your part, there all the honour lies.' " With respect to the emperor Claudius, he was the slave of his passions: a momentary impulse was communicated... | |
| John Trotter Brockett - 1825 - 296 Seiten
...pack on his back. dignitate, are lineally descended from packmen — through no very remote genealogy. Honour and shame from no condition rise ; Act well your part — there all the honour lies. — Pope. PADDICK, or PADDOCK, a frog. Sax. pad, pada. Never a toad. Paddockes, todes, and water-snakes.... | |
| British anthology - 1825 - 460 Seiten
...human-kind, Whose life is healthful, and whose conscience clear, Because he wants a thousand pounds a year. Honour and shame from no condition rise ; Act well your part, there all the honour lies. Fortune in men has some small difference made, One flaunts in rags, one flutters in brocade; The cobbler... | |
| John Trotter Brockett - 1825 - 298 Seiten
...pack on his back. digmtate, are lineally descended from parlnnen—tii rough no very remote genealogy. Honour and shame from no condition rise ; Act well your part — there all the honour lies. — Pope. PADDICK, or PADDOCK, a frog. Sax. pad, pada. Never a toad. PatUockn, lodes, and water-snakes.... | |
| Perry Fairfax Nursey - 1825 - 508 Seiten
...one, all would be mended — Who friendship with a knave haih made, Is judged a partner in the trade. Honour and shame from no condition rise : Act well your part ; there all the honour lies. The virtue of prosperity is temperance ; the virtue of adversity is fortitude Man's rich with little,... | |
| 1826 - 370 Seiten
...last finishing grace to the representation of the tragedy. He probably thought with our poet, that " Honour and shame from no condition rise. Act well your part, there all the honour lies." EURIPIDES. Euripides, the contemporary and rival of Sophocles, had originally devoted himself to the... | |
| Charles Brooks - 1828 - 424 Seiten
...will meet as brethren ; where all will serve one master, even him, whose service is perfect freedom. Honour and shame from no condition rise, Act well your part, there all the honour lies. FEBRUARY 4. Doth not wisdom cry, and understanding put forth her voice 1 — Unto yau, 0 men, I call... | |
| 734 Seiten
...thought, too bad. However, as there was no remedy, I comforted myself with a couplet from Pope — Honour and shame from no condition rise, Act well your part — there all the honour lies. My ambition was sot stifled, it was merely directed into another channel. It was now my object to see... | |
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