The Works of Mr. A. Cowley: In Prose and Verse, Tom 3John Sharpe, 1809 |
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Strona 6
... death " Their rules and pattern vanish'd with their breath . " The hungry rich all near them did devour ; " Their judge was Appetite , and their law was " Power . " Not Want itself could luxury restrain ; " For what that emptied ...
... death " Their rules and pattern vanish'd with their breath . " The hungry rich all near them did devour ; " Their judge was Appetite , and their law was " Power . " Not Want itself could luxury restrain ; " For what that emptied ...
Strona 24
... Death itself to bear away " The threaten'd life ; did glad and greedy stand 580 " At sight of mighty Ammon's lifted hand.— " Our watchful Prince by bending sav'd the wound : " But Death in other coin his reckoning found ; For , whilst ...
... Death itself to bear away " The threaten'd life ; did glad and greedy stand 580 " At sight of mighty Ammon's lifted hand.— " Our watchful Prince by bending sav'd the wound : " But Death in other coin his reckoning found ; For , whilst ...
Strona 25
... death demand ; " But wiser Saul repeal'd their hasty doom ; 66 Conquest abroad , with mercy crown'd at home ; " Nor stain'd with civil slaughter that day's pride , " Which foreign blood in nobler purple dy❜d . " Again the crown th ...
... death demand ; " But wiser Saul repeal'd their hasty doom ; 66 Conquest abroad , with mercy crown'd at home ; " Nor stain'd with civil slaughter that day's pride , " Which foreign blood in nobler purple dy❜d . " Again the crown th ...
Strona 29
... death each chariot bears ; " Where it breaks in , there a whole troop it mows , " And with lopp'd panting limbs the field bestrows : " Alike , the valiant and the cowards die ; . " Neither can they resist , nor can these fly . " In this ...
... death each chariot bears ; " Where it breaks in , there a whole troop it mows , " And with lopp'd panting limbs the field bestrows : " Alike , the valiant and the cowards die ; . " Neither can they resist , nor can these fly . " In this ...
Strona 30
... death to all thine honours send , " And give thy ' immortal royalty an end . " Thus spoke the prophet ; but kind Heaven , we hope " ( Whose threats and anger know no other scope 770 3r Jes 775 " But man's amendment ) does long since ...
... death to all thine honours send , " And give thy ' immortal royalty an end . " Thus spoke the prophet ; but kind Heaven , we hope " ( Whose threats and anger know no other scope 770 3r Jes 775 " But man's amendment ) does long since ...
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Popularne fragmenty
Strona 191 - And they said : Go to, let us build us a city and a tower, whose top may reach unto heaven, and let us make us a name, lest we be scattered abroad upon the face of the whole earth.
Strona 210 - Thus would I double my life's fading space, For he that runs it well, twice runs his race. And in this true delight, These unbought sports...
Strona 213 - Well, then, I now do plainly see This busy world and I shall ne'er agree, &c. And I never then proposed to myself any other advantage from his majesty's happy restoration, but the getting into some moderately convenient retreat in the country...
Strona 134 - But since nature denies to most men the capacity or appetite, and fortune allows but to a very few the opportunities or possibility of applying themselves wholly to philosophy, the best mixture of human affairs that we can make are the employments of a country life.
Strona 68 - I have often observed (with all submission and resignation of spirit to the inscrutable mysteries of Eternal Providence), that, when the fulness and maturity of time is come, that produces the great confusions and changes in the world, it usually pleases God to make it appear, by the manner of them, that they are not the effects of human force or policy, but of the divine justice and predestination ; and, though we see a man, like that which we call Jack of the clock-house, striking, as it were,...
Strona 178 - As riches increase," says Solomon, " so do the mouths that devour them."* The master mouth has no more than before. The owner, methinks, is like Ocnus in the fable, who is perpetually winding a rope of hay, and an ass at the end perpetually eating it. Out of these inconveniences arises naturally one more, which is, that no greatness can be satisfied or contented with...
Strona 215 - Nor by me e'er shall you, You of all names the sweetest, and the best, You Muses, books, and liberty, and rest; You gardens, fields, and woods forsaken be, As long as life itself forsakes not me.
Strona 169 - tis that you should carry me away; And trust me not, my friends, if every day I walk not here with more delight, Than ever, after the most happy fight, In triumph to the Capitol I rode, To thank the gods, and to be thought myself almost a god.
Strona 208 - ... him. There is no danger from me of offending him in this kind; neither my mind, nor my body, nor my fortune, allow me any materials for that vanity. It is sufficient, for my own contentment, that they have preserved me from being scandalous, or remarkable on the defective side.
Strona 160 - Nobilis otii, when he spoke of his own). But several accidents of my ill fortune have disappointed me hitherto, and do still, of that felicity; for though I have made the first and hardest step to it, by abandoning all ambitions and hopes in this World, and by retiring from the noise of all business and almost company, yet I stick still in the Inn of a hired House and Garden, among Weeds and Rubbish; and without that plesantest work of Human Industry, the Improvement of something which we call (not...