Specimens of English Prose Writers: From the Earliest Times to the Close of the Seventeenth Century, with Sketches, Biographical and Literary ...J. Bumpus, 1813 |
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Side 72
... fame : but for par- ticulars , how much worth , virtue , and courage , some particular lords , gentlemen , and others have shewed , unless both sides do write , will never perfectly be known . My residence ( continues he ) hath been ...
... fame : but for par- ticulars , how much worth , virtue , and courage , some particular lords , gentlemen , and others have shewed , unless both sides do write , will never perfectly be known . My residence ( continues he ) hath been ...
Side 102
... was in one kind or other engaged , " that those things which in former times there went only a fame of , though rarely in fact confirmed , were then made credible by the en- 1 suing bloody wars of the Grecians one with another 102 LILLY .
... was in one kind or other engaged , " that those things which in former times there went only a fame of , though rarely in fact confirmed , were then made credible by the en- 1 suing bloody wars of the Grecians one with another 102 LILLY .
Side 144
... fame of their past selves , make accumulation of glory unto their last durations . Others , rather than be lost in the uncomfortable night of nothing , were content to recede into the common being , and make one particle of the public ...
... fame of their past selves , make accumulation of glory unto their last durations . Others , rather than be lost in the uncomfortable night of nothing , were content to recede into the common being , and make one particle of the public ...
Side 171
... fame of Paracelsus , says that , " His sleeping ashes have been ignominiously unraked out of their silent grave by one whose scribbling pen was Fuller of scandals than mo- desty ; his head seemed owl - like , Fuller of folly than wit ...
... fame of Paracelsus , says that , " His sleeping ashes have been ignominiously unraked out of their silent grave by one whose scribbling pen was Fuller of scandals than mo- desty ; his head seemed owl - like , Fuller of folly than wit ...
Side 175
... fame . Concerning this wayward subject against prelacy , the touching whereof is so distasteful and disquietous to a number of men ; as , by what hath been said , I may deserve of charitable readers to be credited , that neither envy ...
... fame . Concerning this wayward subject against prelacy , the touching whereof is so distasteful and disquietous to a number of men ; as , by what hath been said , I may deserve of charitable readers to be credited , that neither envy ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
Æsop affections afterwards Algernon Sidney ANDREW MARVEL archbishop of Canterbury Ben Jonson bishop body born cause cerning Charles Charles II christian church civil College common commonwealth court danger death Discourse divine doctrine doth earl earth Eikon Basilike eminent enemy England English Episcopacy faith fame father give glory happy hath History Hobbes honour humour Isaac Barrow JOHN TILLOTSON Julius Cæsar king king's kingdom Lacedemon Latin learned letters liberty lived London lord mankind matter ment mind nation nature ness never observed occasion opinion Oxford parliament Parliament of England passions peace person philosophical poet prince privy counsellor published reason reign religion sermons shew Smectymnuus soul spirit thee things thou thought tion tracts treatise truth tural unto virtue whence whereof whole wisdom wise writing written