Discoveries, 1641: Conversations with William Drummond of Hawthornden, 1619John Lane, The Bodley Head Limited, 1641 - 106 Seiten |
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Seite 17
... Homers Thersites . ( 92 ) Α'μετροεπής Ακριτόμοθος : speaking without judge- Salust . ment , Loquax magis , quàm fœcundus . Satis loquentia , sapientiæ param . Homeri . Hesiodus . Homeri Vlysses . Pindar : Epami- nond . DISCOVERIES 17.
... Homers Thersites . ( 92 ) Α'μετροεπής Ακριτόμοθος : speaking without judge- Salust . ment , Loquax magis , quàm fœcundus . Satis loquentia , sapientiæ param . Homeri . Hesiodus . Homeri Vlysses . Pindar : Epami- nond . DISCOVERIES 17.
Seite 18
... Homer , is made a long thinking man , before hee speaks ; and Epaminondas is celebrated by Pindar , to be a man , that though he knew much , yet hee spoke but little . Demacatus , when on the Bench he was long silent , and said nothing ...
... Homer , is made a long thinking man , before hee speaks ; and Epaminondas is celebrated by Pindar , to be a man , that though he knew much , yet hee spoke but little . Demacatus , when on the Bench he was long silent , and said nothing ...
Seite 24
... Homer sayes , hee hates him worse then hell - mouth , that utters one thing with his tongue , and keepes another in his brest . Which high expression was grounded on divine Reason . For a lying mouth is a stinking pit , and murthers ...
... Homer sayes , hee hates him worse then hell - mouth , that utters one thing with his tongue , and keepes another in his brest . Which high expression was grounded on divine Reason . For a lying mouth is a stinking pit , and murthers ...
Seite 48
... Homer ) that kept Troy so long from sacking ? Nothing more commends the Soveraigne to the Subject , then it . For hee that is religious , ( 106 ) must be mercifull and just necessarily . And they are too strong ties upon mankind ...
... Homer ) that kept Troy so long from sacking ? Nothing more commends the Soveraigne to the Subject , then it . For hee that is religious , ( 106 ) must be mercifull and just necessarily . And they are too strong ties upon mankind ...
Seite 69
... out of danger , let them reade both , the old and the new : but no lesse take heed , that their new flowers , and sweetnesse doe not as Salust . Chaucer . Virgil . Ennius . Homer . Virgil . Quinti- lian DISCOVERIES 69.
... out of danger , let them reade both , the old and the new : but no lesse take heed , that their new flowers , and sweetnesse doe not as Salust . Chaucer . Virgil . Ennius . Homer . Virgil . Quinti- lian DISCOVERIES 69.
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