Anecdotes of Literature and Scarce Books, Volume 6F. C. & J. Rivington, 1812 - Bibliography |
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Page 10
... pleasure's shoes , Then he sighed , and sayd , alas ! Man is sinne , and flesh is grasse . I thought my mistres haires were gold , And in her locks my harte I folde : Her amber tresses were the sight That wrapped me in vaine delight ...
... pleasure's shoes , Then he sighed , and sayd , alas ! Man is sinne , and flesh is grasse . I thought my mistres haires were gold , And in her locks my harte I folde : Her amber tresses were the sight That wrapped me in vaine delight ...
Page 13
... Pleasures for night , and comforts for the day . What are faire women but rich natures wealth ? Thetis is such , and more if more may be : Thetis is sick , then what may comfort me . Women are sweets that salve mens sowrest ills , Women ...
... Pleasures for night , and comforts for the day . What are faire women but rich natures wealth ? Thetis is such , and more if more may be : Thetis is sick , then what may comfort me . Women are sweets that salve mens sowrest ills , Women ...
Page 17
... be sweet in brewing , Bitter is the sad ensuing ; For the humour of love he shameth , And himselfe with lust defameth : YOL . VI . C For For a minutes pleasure gayning , Fame and honour ever EARLY ENGLISH POETRY . 17.
... be sweet in brewing , Bitter is the sad ensuing ; For the humour of love he shameth , And himselfe with lust defameth : YOL . VI . C For For a minutes pleasure gayning , Fame and honour ever EARLY ENGLISH POETRY . 17.
Page 18
William Beloe. For a minutes pleasure gayning , Fame and honour ever stayning . Gazing thus so farre awry , Last the chip fals in his eye , Then it burns that earst but heate him , And his owne rod gins to beate him . His choycest sweets ...
William Beloe. For a minutes pleasure gayning , Fame and honour ever stayning . Gazing thus so farre awry , Last the chip fals in his eye , Then it burns that earst but heate him , And his owne rod gins to beate him . His choycest sweets ...
Page 28
... pleasure may excite thee , Can there be a dainty thing Thats not thine if thou wilt sing . THE MUSES ELYZIUM , THE CHARACTER OF WOMEN . MICHAEL DRAYTON . How in my thoughts should I contrive The image I am framing , Which is so far ...
... pleasure may excite thee , Can there be a dainty thing Thats not thine if thou wilt sing . THE MUSES ELYZIUM , THE CHARACTER OF WOMEN . MICHAEL DRAYTON . How in my thoughts should I contrive The image I am framing , Which is so far ...
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Common terms and phrases
An't beauty better Bishop Bishop of Ely Boccacio brest Church collection copy curious delight desire doth eare edition England English Epigrams Exon eyes faire faisons le seruice fame farre feare glory Gossan grace hart hast hath haue heart heaven honour John John Palsgrave JOHN WEEVER JUDGE JEFFERIES King Knight Latin learned London Lord loue MICHAEL DRAYTON Monsieur nous faisons muse musicke neer noble Peter Short pipe pleasure poem pounds praise prefixed printed rare rarity reader Richard Brathwait sayd Sermon serue the Quire shee shepheard shew sighs sight sing singular SONG soule sound specimen sunne sweet thee thereof Thetis thine thing Thomas thou thought tion tong tract translated true unto verses vertue vnto volume voyage vpon Walter Hammond wheel wherein whilst William Bourne William Waller words worthy
Popular passages
Page 419 - WHEN civil dudgeon first grew high, And men fell out they knew not why ; When hard words, jealousies, and fears, Set folks together by the ears, And made them fight, like mad or drunk, For dame Religion, as for punk...
Page 48 - Ah, were she pitiful as she is fair, Or but as mild as she is seeming so, Then were my hopes greater than my despair, Then all the world were heaven, nothing woe. Ah, were her heart relenting as her hand, That seems to melt even with the mildest touch, Then knew I where to seat me in a land, Under wide heavens, but yet [I know] not such.
Page 159 - Proud lust-stung Tarquine, seeking still to prove her, Romeo, Richard, more whose names I know not, Their sugred tongues and power attractive...
Page 174 - Midas gape for more; I neither want nor yet abound, — Enough's a feast, content is crowned. I feign not friendship where I hate; I fawn not on the great (in show) ; I prize, I praise a mean estate, — Neither too lofty nor too low: This, this is all my choice, my cheer, — A mind content, a conscience clear.
Page 159 - Adonis with his amber tresses, Faire fire-hot Venus charming him to love her, Chaste Lucretia, virgine-like her dresses, Proud lust-stung Tarquine, seeking still to prove her...
Page 156 - Epigrammes in the oldest Cut and newest Fashion. A twise seven Houres (in so many Weekes) Studie. No longer (like the Fashion) not unlike to continue.
Page 209 - twixt hope and fear, into death's eternal slumber. Lest my foes their boasting make, " spite of right on him we trample ;" And a pride in mischief take, hearten'd by my sad example. As for me, I'll ride secure at Thy mercy's sacred anchor, And undaunted will endure fiercest storms of wrong and rancour. These...
Page 194 - ... fair Ah braid no more that shining hair! As my curious hand or eye, Hovering round thee let it fly. Let it fly as unconfined As its calm ravisher, the wind; Who hath left his darling th' East, To wanton o'er that spicy nest.
Page 265 - NEWES of the COMPLEMENT of the ART of NAVIGATION, and of the mightie Empire of CATAIA ; together with the Straits of Anian.
Page 297 - I found it to trend towardes the west : I still followed the leading thereof in the same height, and after fiftie or...