Discoveries, 1641: Conversations with William Drummond of Hawthornden, 1619Barnes & Noble, 1966 - 134 Seiten |
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Seite 34
... Reason , and common Con- founder of Truth : with which a man goes groping in the darke , no otherwise , then if hee were blind . Great understandings are most wrack'd and troubled with it : Nay , sometimes they will rather choose to dye ...
... Reason , and common Con- founder of Truth : with which a man goes groping in the darke , no otherwise , then if hee were blind . Great understandings are most wrack'd and troubled with it : Nay , sometimes they will rather choose to dye ...
Seite 60
... reason , a third in easinesse , a fourth in nature and grace . Some have diligence , and comelinesse : but they want Majesty . They can expresse a humane forme in all the graces , sweetnesse , and elegancy ; but they misse the Authority ...
... reason , a third in easinesse , a fourth in nature and grace . Some have diligence , and comelinesse : but they want Majesty . They can expresse a humane forme in all the graces , sweetnesse , and elegancy ; but they misse the Authority ...
Seite 82
... reason in frame , whose sentence is preposterous ; nor his Elocution cleare and perfect , whose utterance breakes it selfe into frag- ments and uncertainties : Were it not a dishonour to a mighty Prince , to have the Majesty of his em ...
... reason in frame , whose sentence is preposterous ; nor his Elocution cleare and perfect , whose utterance breakes it selfe into frag- ments and uncertainties : Were it not a dishonour to a mighty Prince , to have the Majesty of his em ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Action affections Alcestis alwayes answer Aristotle BEN JONSON better busines Cæsar call'd CEZAED CHIGAN Cicero Comedy counsell creatures delight discourse doth Eloquence Epick Epigrame erre Euripides excellent Fable faine farre Father favour fitnesse foole foolish grace greatnesse grow heare hearers hee hath heth himselfe Homer honest honour Horace imitated invent Iohn judgement King labour Lady Language laughter Learning lesse Lord Lysippus Master meere MICHIGAN mind nature never offended perfect person pides Plato Plautus Poeme Poesie Poet Poetry praise preter Prince profit publike quæ quàm Queen Quintilian saith scorne Sejanus selfe sense shee shew Silent Woman Sophocles speake style Tacitus Theseus things thinke thought tion tium translated Truth tyme UNIV verses vertue vices Virgil vitious wher whole Wiat wise words write wrott wyfe yett