Brittische bibliothek, Volume 4 |
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Abſicht allgemeinen alſo alten Augen Band Beaufort Betrachtung beyden blos Briefe Bücher chen Cleone derſelben dieſe dritten eben ſo Ehre eignen einige endlich England erhalten erſten fallen feine feyn fich find Folgen folgende fonte Freund ganze geben Gelegenheit gemacht Geſchichte geweſen giebt Glanville glauben gleich Gott groſſen Hand håtte Herr Bower Herrn Herz hierauf Himmel iſt Jahr Kind kleinen kommen König konte Körper kurz lange laſſen Leben Lehre leicht Leſer lezten lich Liebe Lord machen macht Mann Menſchen möchte müſſen Nachricht Natur neue Perſonen Pope Recht Religion Römer Sache ſagen ſagt ſchon Schrift Seele ſehen ſehr ſein ſeiner ſelbſt ſen ſeyn ſich ſie ſind ſolche ſollte ſondern Stande Stellen Stück Theil Tode unſer Urſache Vater Verfaſſer vers verſchiedene viel vielleicht wahr wåre Weiſe Welt wenig Werke Wichtigkeit wider wieder wohl wollen wollte Worte Wunder
Popular passages
Page 121 - Unblam'd thro' Life, lamented in thy End. Thefe are thy Honours ! not that here thy Buft Is mix'd with Heroes, or with Kings thy Duft ; But that the Worthy and the Good fhall fay, Striking their penfive Bofoms— • Here lies GAY?
Page 378 - Nor will 1 fear even death, to save Her dearer beauties from the grave. Lydia, My heart young Calais inspires, Whose bosom glows with mutual fires, For whom I twice would die with joy, If death would spare the charming boy. Horace. Yet what if Love, whose bands we broke, Again should tame us to the yoke; Should I shake off bright Chloe's chain, And take my Lydia home again?
Page 238 - Ask you what Provocation I have had? The strong Antipathy of Good to Bad. When Truth or Virtue an Affront endures, Th' Affront is mine, my friend, and should be yours.
Page 372 - A Poetical Translation of the Works of Horace, with the original text, and critical Notes collected from his best latin and french Commentators, by the Rev.
Page 378 - I shake off bright Chloe's chain, And take my Lydia home again? Lydia. Though he exceed in beauty far The rising lustre of a star ; Though light as cork thy fancy strays. Thy passions wild as angry seas, When vex'd with storms ; yet gladly I With thee would live, with thee would die.
Page 273 - BedingfieJd in relation thereto. 2) Copies of the faid pretended Letters fent him by Sir Henry Bedingfield , and of a fubfequent Affidavit made by Mr. Bower of their not being wrote by him, or with his Privity. With iome fhort Obfervations on thofe pretended Letters, proving them to be fpurious. gvo. biefer fieme...
Page 153 - Catalogue. \ the Criterion, or Miracles examined, with a view to expofe the pretenfions of Pagans and...
Page 226 - The time of danger, and The means of safety; to which is added, The way of holiness. Being the substance of three sermons, preached on the late public fast-days ... By James Hervey . . . London printed: Boston re-printed: and sold by Edes & Gill, in Queen-street, 1758. 80 p. 2o«m. Sigs.: [A]-K'.