The French Anas ... |
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Страница 6
... lived at Verona on a pension from Prince Scaliger ; but so moderate was it , that Dante could scarcely subsist . In the same court was another person , whom Sca- liger maintained as a buffoon , but treated very munificently . " How ...
... lived at Verona on a pension from Prince Scaliger ; but so moderate was it , that Dante could scarcely subsist . In the same court was another person , whom Sca- liger maintained as a buffoon , but treated very munificently . " How ...
Страница 90
... lived long enough . ITALY Is full of atheists and infidels : neverthe- less , the number of writers on the soul's immortality is infinite . But I think they believe as little about that as about other subjects ; for I consider it as a ...
... lived long enough . ITALY Is full of atheists and infidels : neverthe- less , the number of writers on the soul's immortality is infinite . But I think they believe as little about that as about other subjects ; for I consider it as a ...
Страница 108
... lived retired a long time at Leyden , and died at the Spa Waters , 1653 . VERSES ON HIS DEATH . Ingens exigua jacet hac sub mole sepultus Assertor regum , numinis atque pugil . Finivit Spadæ vitam Salmasius hospes , Trajectum cineres ...
... lived retired a long time at Leyden , and died at the Spa Waters , 1653 . VERSES ON HIS DEATH . Ingens exigua jacet hac sub mole sepultus Assertor regum , numinis atque pugil . Finivit Spadæ vitam Salmasius hospes , Trajectum cineres ...
Страница 112
... lived in the world . After quitting his monkish garb , he circulated a report through Europe , that he was descended from the princes of Verona of his name . To conceal his real origin , he sojourned in France . In his grand work ...
... lived in the world . After quitting his monkish garb , he circulated a report through Europe , that he was descended from the princes of Verona of his name . To conceal his real origin , he sojourned in France . In his grand work ...
Страница 115
... ' hui , * The author of this sonnet was the son of a baker in Paris ; where he lived a dissolute life , without morals or religion , and died in 1682 . Ne trouble point l'horreur dont ma faute est punie . I 2 PATINIANA . 115.
... ' hui , * The author of this sonnet was the son of a baker in Paris ; where he lived a dissolute life , without morals or religion , and died in 1682 . Ne trouble point l'horreur dont ma faute est punie . I 2 PATINIANA . 115.
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Страница 26 - ... for wit lying most in the assemblage of ideas, and putting those together with quickness and variety, wherein can be found any resemblance or congruity, thereby to make up pleasant pictures and agreeable visions in the fancy; judgment, on the contrary, lies quite on the other side, in separating carefully, one from another, ideas, wherein can be found the least difference, thereby to avoid being misled by similitude, and by affinity to take one thing for another.
Страница 127 - Not sunk by sloth, nor rais'd by servitude ; To balance fortune by a just expense, Join with economy, magnificence ; With splendour, charity ; with plenty, health ; Oh teach us, Bathurst ! yet unspoil'd by wealth ! That secret rare, between th' extremes to move Of mad Good-nature, and of mean Self-love.
Страница 119 - Maevius scribble in Apollo's spite, There are who judge still worse than he can write. Some have at first for wits, then poets past, Turn'd critics next, and prov'd plain fools at last. Some neither can for wits nor critics pass, As heavy mules are neither horse nor ass.
Страница 113 - I look upon tranquillity of mind and patience to contribute as much as any thing whatever to the curing diseases. On this principle I account for the circumstance of animals not labouring under illness so long as human beings. Brutes do not think so much as we, nor vex themselves about futurity; but endure their maladies without reflecting on them, and recover from them by the sole means of temperance and repose.
Страница 192 - He was famous for his piety and his professional labour* saints : hence toe-saint, or toe-sin in process of time. But Pliny reports, that many ages before his time bells were in use, and called Tintinnabula; and Suetonius says,, that Augustus had one put at the gate of the temple of Jupiter, to call the meeting of the people.
Страница 79 - Sol uescit comitis non memor esse sui. Where'er old Ocean's boundless waters roll, Have borne, great Drake, thy bark from pole to pole. Should envious mortals o'er thy labours sleep, The stars, which led thee thro' the ventrous deep, Shall tell thy praises; and thy well-earn'd fame The sun, thy fellow traveller, proclaim.
Страница 195 - Since half the senate Not Content can say, Geese nations save, and puppies plots betray. What makes him model realms and counsel kings:' An incapacity for smaller things. Poor Chremes can't conduct his own estate, And thence has undertaken Europe's fate. Gehenno leaves the realm to Chremes...
Страница 133 - John Quebecca, precentor to My Lord the King. When he is admitted to the choir of angels, whose society he will embellish, and where he will distinguish himself by his powers of song, God shall say to the angels, " Cease, ye calves 1 and let me hear John Queoecca, the precentor of My Lord the King...
Страница 134 - ... midnight, and in bed, whilst he waited to carry it to the press. 437''"THE chief companions of Addison were Steele, Budgell, Philips, Carey, Davenant, and Colonel Bret. With one or other of these he always breakfasted. He studied all the morning, then dined at a tavern, and went afterwards to Button's. A LADY once complained to Segrais of the "* evil influence of her natal star, which had occasioned her to commit such an action against her will. " Madam," replied Segrais (awaking from a reverie),...
Страница 79 - In age, youth, and manhood, three wives have I tried, Whose qualities rare all my wants have supplied. The first, goaded on by the ardour of youth, I woo'd for the sake of her person, forsooth: The second I took for the sake of her purse; And the third — for what reason? I wanted a nurse.