Anecdotes of Literature and Scarce Books, 6. cilt

Ön Kapak
F. C. and J. Rivington, 1812
 

Diğer baskılar - Tümünü görüntüle

Sık kullanılan terimler ve kelime öbekleri

Popüler pasajlar

Sayfa 96 - your rose-buds whilst you may, For time is still a flying, And that same flower which grows to-day, To-morrow will be dying. The glorious lamp of heaven, the sun, The higher he is getting, The sooner will his race be run, And nearer is to setting.
Sayfa 188 - Most barren with best using, Why so? More we enjoy it, more it dies, If not enjoyd, it sighing cries Hey ho! Love is a torment of the minde, A tempest everlasting, And Jove hath made it of a kinde Not well, nor full, nor fasting, Why so? More we enjoy it, more it dies, If not
Sayfa 436 - PAPPE WITH AN HATCHET, alias a Figge for my Godsonne, or Cracke me this Nut, or a Countrie Cuffe, that is, a sound Boxe of the Eare for the Idiot MARTIN to hold his Peace, seeing the Patch will take no Warning. Written by one that dares call a Dog
Sayfa 255 - Yet what is love, I pray thee shoe, A thing that creeps, it cannot goe, A prize that passeth to and fro, A thing for one, a thing for two, And he that proves must finde it so, And this is love (sweet friend) I troe.
Sayfa 254 - Now what is love, I praie thee tell ? It is that fountaine and that well, Where pleasure and repentance dwell; It is perhaps that sauncing bell, That tols all in to heaven or hell, And this is love
Sayfa 19 - That to man in life is lent, And some others doe contend, Quiet none, like to a friend. Others hold there is no wealth Compared to a perfect health. Some man's mind in quiet stands> When he is lord of many lands. But
Sayfa 235 - A WORLD OF WONDERS, or an Introduction to a Treatise touching the Conformitie of ancient and moderne Wonders, or a Preparative Treatise to the Apologie for Herodotus; the Argument whereof is taken from the Apologie for Herodotus, written in Latino by
Sayfa 163 - Shakespeare, when I saw thine issue, I swore Apollo got them, and none other, Their rosie-tainted features clothed in tissue, Some heaven-born goddesse said to be their mother. Rose cheeckt Adonis with his amber tresses,
Sayfa 307 - much, I was constrained to coast the same towardes the south, not seeing any shore west from me, neither was there any yse towards the north, but a great sea, free, large, very salt, and blue, and of an
Sayfa 19 - these, When mouth kisseth and hart grees, With folded armes, and lippes meeting, Each soule another sweetly greeting. For by the breath the soule fleeteth, And soule with soule in kissing meeteth. If love be so sweet a thing, That such happy

Kaynakça bilgileri