Restituta: Or, Titles, Extracts, and Characters of Old Books in English Literature, Reviewed, Volume 3T. Bensley, 1815 - English literature |
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Page 2
... live with me , and be my love ; and it may be found scattered in detached passages of the dramas of Shake- speare , and Beaumont and Fletcher ; and occasionally in the Shepherd's Pipe of William Browne , and the Shepherd's Hunting of ...
... live with me , and be my love ; and it may be found scattered in detached passages of the dramas of Shake- speare , and Beaumont and Fletcher ; and occasionally in the Shepherd's Pipe of William Browne , and the Shepherd's Hunting of ...
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... live againe in glory with his æternized sister , divine ELIZA . Thus , not dreading your kinde acceptance of my love , I humblie take my leave . Your worship's most obsequious M . HENRY PETOWE . " THE INDUCTION . I that obscure have ...
... live againe in glory with his æternized sister , divine ELIZA . Thus , not dreading your kinde acceptance of my love , I humblie take my leave . Your worship's most obsequious M . HENRY PETOWE . " THE INDUCTION . I that obscure have ...
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... live obscuer at Eliza's fall , Her fall from life to death ; oh ! stay not there , Though she were dead , the shril ... lives , In joy beyond all thought . Then , weepe no more , Your sighing weedes put off , for weeping gives ...
... live obscuer at Eliza's fall , Her fall from life to death ; oh ! stay not there , Though she were dead , the shril ... lives , In joy beyond all thought . Then , weepe no more , Your sighing weedes put off , for weeping gives ...
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... live with him in bliss eternally . Then come , faire day of joyfull smiling sorrow , Since my teares dry , come happie day to - morow . Yee herralds of my heart , my heavie groanes , My teares which , if they could , would showre like ...
... live with him in bliss eternally . Then come , faire day of joyfull smiling sorrow , Since my teares dry , come happie day to - morow . Yee herralds of my heart , my heavie groanes , My teares which , if they could , would showre like ...
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... lives in peace , whome I do mourne for so ; She lives in heaven , and yet my soule laments . Since shee's so happie , I'le converte my woe ; To present joy turne all my languishments ; And with my sorrowes see the time doth wast , The ...
... lives in peace , whome I do mourne for so ; She lives in heaven , and yet my soule laments . Since shee's so happie , I'le converte my woe ; To present joy turne all my languishments ; And with my sorrowes see the time doth wast , The ...
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Restituta: Or, Titles, Extracts, and Characters of Old Books in ..., Volume 1 Egerton Brydges No preview available - 2015 |
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Bishop brother Cambridge Cambridgeshire Charles Jenner Christ Church Clare Hall Coll Conyers Middleton court daughter DEAR SIR death dedication delight died divine doth Earl earth edition English Epigrams eyes fame father favour fear fire gentleman give glory God's grace Hall hand hart hast hath heart heaven Henry History honour hope Jenyns John John's College King King's Lady late learned letter live Lond London Lord Lord Grey Magdalen College Majesty married Master mind Muse never night noble Oliver Cromwell Parliament peace Pembroke Hall person poem poet poetry poor praise pray present Prince printed Queen Queen's College shew sinne Soame Jenyns sonnet soul Street sunne sweet thee thine things Thomas thou thought Trinity College Trinity Hall true unto verse vertue White Kennett worthy write
Popular passages
Page 178 - That love might live, and quarrels all may cease. Pray for the health of all that are diseased, Confession unto all that are convicted, And Patience unto all that are displeased, And Comfort unto all that are afflicted, And Mercy unto all that have offended, And Grace to all, that all may be amended.
Page 104 - Paul's church, on that side, and Cheapside fire besets the great building on this side, and the church, though all of stone outward, though naked of houses about it, and though so high above all buildings in the city, yet, within a while, doth yield to the violent assaults of the conquering flames, and strangely takes fire at the top : now the lead melts and runs down, as if it had been snow before the sun ; and the great beams and massy stones with a great noise fall on the pavement, and break through...
Page 491 - BLOUNT: I purpose to be blunt with you, and out of my dulness to encounter you with a dedication in memory of that pure elemental wit Chr. Marlowe, whose ghost or genius is to be seen walk the churchyard in, at the least, three or four sheets. Methinks you should presently look wild now, and grow humorously frantic upon the taste of it. Well, lest you should, let me tell you: this spirit was sometime...
Page 64 - An Argument, proving, that according to the Covenant of Eternal Life, revealed in the Scriptures, Man may be translated from hence into that Eternal Life, without passing through Death, although the Human Nature of Christ himself could not be thus translated till he had passed through Death ; 1703.
Page 186 - In the preface to his poetical pieces he alludes to her in terms of touching simplicity and tenderness : " As these pieces were mostly written in various passions, so passion hath now thrust them out into the world. God having taken away the dear companion of the last nineteen years of .my life, as her sorrows and sufferings long ago gave being to some of these poems, for reasons which the world is not concerned to know ; so my grief for her removal, and the revival of the sense of former things,...
Page 132 - No JEST LIKE A TRUE JEST, being a compendious record of the merry Life and mad Exploits of Capt. James Hind, the great robber of England ; together with the close of all at Worcester, where he was drawn, hanged, and quartered, for High Treason against the Commonwealth, Sept.
Page 43 - ... he has outdone all men that way; for he has made a gridiron and a. frying-pan in verse, that, besides the likeness in shape, the very tone and sound of the words did perfectly represent the noise that is made by these utensils, such as the old poet called Sartago loquendi.
Page 188 - ... sake. Nor was sympathy with the tone of Herbert's hymns wanting even amongst contemporary Puritans. Baxter said: " I must confess after all, that next to the Scripture poems, there are none so savoury to me as Mr. George Herbert's. I know that Cowley and others far excel Herbert in wit and accurate composure ; but, as Seneca takes with me above all his contemporaries, because he speaketh things by words, feelingly and seriously, like a man that is past jest...
Page 447 - MAJESTIE both of her lawfull seate, and happy life. — With a Declaration of the manner how her Excellency was entertained by her souldyers into her Campe Royall at Tilbery, in Essex: And of the overthrow had against the Spanish Fleete ; briefly, truly, and effectually set foorth, declared, and handled, by JAMES ASKE. — Post victoriam gloria. To the Right Worshipfull, indued with all singularitie, Julius Caesar, Doctor of the Civill Law...
Page 86 - Thou savedst me from the bloody massacres Of faithless Indians ; from their treacherous wars ; From raging fevers ; from the sultry breath Of tainted air, which cloyed the jaws of death...