Restituta; Or, Titles, Extracts, and Characters of Old Books in English Literature, Revived, Volume 1T. Bensley, 1814 - English literature |
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Page 9
... Thomas Baker , B.D. Fellow of the said College . But the choicest of all , was lately possessed by the late most Reverend Archbishop Sancroft , which was Joselyn's ( his Chaplain's ) own Book , ( as I have been told ) and corrected and ...
... Thomas Baker , B.D. Fellow of the said College . But the choicest of all , was lately possessed by the late most Reverend Archbishop Sancroft , which was Joselyn's ( his Chaplain's ) own Book , ( as I have been told ) and corrected and ...
Page 11
... Thomas Cartwright , a man exceedingly disaf- fected to the Archbishop and the Hierarchy ) having married Stubbs's sister , was very probably encouraged and assisted by him . But enough of this book , and the unworthy reflections in it ...
... Thomas Cartwright , a man exceedingly disaf- fected to the Archbishop and the Hierarchy ) having married Stubbs's sister , was very probably encouraged and assisted by him . But enough of this book , and the unworthy reflections in it ...
Page 17
... Thomas Digges of Barham Esq . who died 1590 , ( son of Christopher Digges , who died 1576. ) By her he had a posthumous son Thomas Digges , born July 2 , 1590 ; and she remarried in 1596 Thomas Palmer , Gent . son to Sir Henry Palmer of ...
... Thomas Digges of Barham Esq . who died 1590 , ( son of Christopher Digges , who died 1576. ) By her he had a posthumous son Thomas Digges , born July 2 , 1590 ; and she remarried in 1596 Thomas Palmer , Gent . son to Sir Henry Palmer of ...
Page 18
... Thomas Baker in a letter to Bishop Kennett , 1726 , says : " Sometime ago his Grace my Lord Archbishop , inquired after an old edition of Camden's Britannia , printed 1585 , 8vo . I could then only give his Grace an account of it as ...
... Thomas Baker in a letter to Bishop Kennett , 1726 , says : " Sometime ago his Grace my Lord Archbishop , inquired after an old edition of Camden's Britannia , printed 1585 , 8vo . I could then only give his Grace an account of it as ...
Page 39
... - dore of Paules at the signe of the Gun . No date - small Octavo . It is dedicated by E. W. to the Lady Anne , wife to the Right Wor- shipful Sir Thomas Lodge , Knt . this your vertuous life , and the reporte of your 39.
... - dore of Paules at the signe of the Gun . No date - small Octavo . It is dedicated by E. W. to the Lady Anne , wife to the Right Wor- shipful Sir Thomas Lodge , Knt . this your vertuous life , and the reporte of your 39.
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Alace Archbishop Archdeacon beauty Bishop Bishop of Ely Book Church Coll College command copy Dæmons daughter Dean death died divine doth Earl Edition ELEG English EPIGRAM euery Extract eyes fair fame father favour feare George Wither glory God's grace griefe hand hath haue heard heart heaven Henry honour hope Ibid imprinted John John Fuller King knight labour Lady late learned letter lived London Lord loue Master mind Mirror for Magistrates Muse never noble Oxford pleasure Poems Poet praise Prebend Prebendary Prince printed Reader rich Richard Satyrs seynt shew sing sith sorrow soul spirit sweet Syntipas thee thereof thine things Thomas Thomas Fuller thought Titus Oates translated Trinity College true unto verse vertue vnto volume vpon wherein William William Hayley words worth write
Popular passages
Page 307 - Unless he feel within Some source of consolation from above. Secret refreshings that repair his strength And fainting spirits uphold.
Page 366 - Pleasures are not, if they last, In their passing, is their best. Glory is most bright and gay In a flash, and so away. Feed apace then, greedy eyes, On the wonder you behold ; Take it sudden as it flies, Though you take it not to hold : When your eyes have done their part, Thought must length it in the heart.
Page 306 - To the inmost mind, There exercise all his fierce accidents, And on her purest spirits prey, As on entrails, joints, and limbs, With answerable pains, but more intense, Though void of corporal sense.
Page 223 - Let him that will, ascend the tottering seat Of courtly grandeur, and become as great As are his mounting wishes : as for me, Let sweet repose and rest my portion be. Give me some mean, obscure recess ; a sphere Out of the road of business, or the fear Of falling lower ; where I sweetly may Myself and dear retirement still enjoy. Let not my life, or name, be known unto The grandees of the time...
Page 208 - And in nothing terrified by your adversaries : which is to them an evident token of perdition, but to you of salvation, and that of God.
Page 307 - With gifts and graces eminently adorn'd, To some great work, thy glory, And people's safety, which in part they effect : Yet toward these, thus dignified, thou oft, Amidst their height of noon, Changest thy countenance, and thy hand, with no regard Of highest favours past From thee on them, or them to thee of service.
Page 230 - ... faith, and yet presume not; and desire, with St. Paul, to be dissolved and to be with Christ, with whom even in death there is life. Be like the good servant, and even at midnight be waking, lest when death cometh and stealeth upon you...
Page 308 - The punishment of dissolute days ; in fine, Just or unjust, alike seem miserable, For oft alike both come to evil end.
Page 192 - ... very men, in their secret conventicles, did covenant and swear to each other to be assiduous and faithful in using their best endeavours to set up the presbyterian doctrine and discipline ; and both in such a manner as they themselves had not yet agreed on, but up that government must. To which end, there were many that wandered up and down, and were active in sowing discontents and sedition by venomous and secret murmurings...
Page 307 - The angelic orders, and inferior creatures mute, Irrational and brute? Nor do I name of men the common rout, That...