Polonius: A Collection of Wise Saws and Modern InstancesThomas B. Mosher, 1901 - 109 sider |
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Side xviii
... verse ever a poet has sung : Nevertheless few hearing it hear ; Hope , flattering alway , Lives in the bosom of all — reigns in the blood of the Young . " " And why , " says the note - book of one ' nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vita ...
... verse ever a poet has sung : Nevertheless few hearing it hear ; Hope , flattering alway , Lives in the bosom of all — reigns in the blood of the Young . " " And why , " says the note - book of one ' nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vita ...
Side 1
... verses or rhymes extempore , or the making of a satirical simile of every thing , or the turning of every thing to a jest , or the falsifying or contradict- ing of every thing by cavil , or the like , ( whereof in the faculties of the ...
... verses or rhymes extempore , or the making of a satirical simile of every thing , or the turning of every thing to a jest , or the falsifying or contradict- ing of every thing by cavil , or the like , ( whereof in the faculties of the ...
Side 18
... verse noteth , " Percontatorem fugito , nam garrulus idem est , " an inquisitive man is a prattler ; so , upon the like reason , a credulous man is a deceiver ; as we see it in fame , that he that will easily believe rumours , will as ...
... verse noteth , " Percontatorem fugito , nam garrulus idem est , " an inquisitive man is a prattler ; so , upon the like reason , a credulous man is a deceiver ; as we see it in fame , that he that will easily believe rumours , will as ...
Side 22
... verse large as nature ; universal nature would barely hold what he could say about himself . Not a dyspeptic tailor on any shop - board of this city but could furnish all England , the year through , with reading about himself , about ...
... verse large as nature ; universal nature would barely hold what he could say about himself . Not a dyspeptic tailor on any shop - board of this city but could furnish all England , the year through , with reading about himself , about ...
Side 39
... verses , $ Scilicet ingenuas didicisse fideliter artes Emollit mores , nec sinit esse feros . LVI LEARNING It taketh away the wildness , and barbarism , and fierce- ness of men's minds ; but indeed the accent had need be laid upon ...
... verses , $ Scilicet ingenuas didicisse fideliter artes Emollit mores , nec sinit esse feros . LVI LEARNING It taketh away the wildness , and barbarism , and fierce- ness of men's minds ; but indeed the accent had need be laid upon ...
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Æsop Annotated Copy aright asked ATHEISM Atheist Bacon better Boswell called Carlyle Coleridge commonly death deed discourse doth Edinburgh Review Edward FitzGerald English Epictetus Epicurus fables faculty faith fear feelings fool friends genius give Goethe gold happy hath heart heaven HORACE Walpole human idle James Boswell Johnson kind Know thyself Lavater light Lion live look Lord Madame Du Deffand maketh man's MELAN men's mind miseries morals nature never noble ourselves Pascal passions perhaps Phædrus Plato Polonius poor prejudice Prince proverb reason religion rest rich Richter Rochefoucauld SAWS AND MODERN says Bacon says Fuller Selden sense Socrates soul Tacitus talk tell thee Themistocles thine thing thou art thought thyself tions true Truisms truth verse virtues vulgar whole WILLIAM PICKERING wisdom wise wiser wishes worth write