Discoveries, 1641: Conversations with William Drummond of Hawthornden, 1619John Lane, The Bodley Head Limited, 1641 - 106 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 14
Seite 18
... ignorance : who being invited to a feast in Athens , where a great Princes Ambassadours were entertain'd , and was the onely person had said nothing at the table ; one of them with courtesie asked him ; What shall we returne from thee ...
... ignorance : who being invited to a feast in Athens , where a great Princes Ambassadours were entertain'd , and was the onely person had said nothing at the table ; one of them with courtesie asked him ; What shall we returne from thee ...
Seite 20
... I would no more chuse a Rhetorician , for reigning in a Schoole ; then I would a Pilot , for rowing in a Pond . Love , that is ignorant , and Hatred have almost the same ends : many foolish Lovers wish the same to 20 DISCOVERIES.
... I would no more chuse a Rhetorician , for reigning in a Schoole ; then I would a Pilot , for rowing in a Pond . Love , that is ignorant , and Hatred have almost the same ends : many foolish Lovers wish the same to 20 DISCOVERIES.
Seite 24
... ignorance was the first cause of our wickednesse . Truth is mans proper good ; and the onely im- proprium mortall thing , was given to our mortality to use . No good Christian , or Ethnick , if he be honest , ( 95 ) can misse it : no ...
... ignorance was the first cause of our wickednesse . Truth is mans proper good ; and the onely im- proprium mortall thing , was given to our mortality to use . No good Christian , or Ethnick , if he be honest , ( 95 ) can misse it : no ...
Seite 27
... Ignorant . Cestius in his time , was preferr'd to Cicero ; Cestius . so farre , as the Ignorant durst . They learn'd him without booke , and had him often in their mouthes : But a man cannot imagine that thing so foolish , or rude , but ...
... Ignorant . Cestius in his time , was preferr'd to Cicero ; Cestius . so farre , as the Ignorant durst . They learn'd him without booke , and had him often in their mouthes : But a man cannot imagine that thing so foolish , or rude , but ...
Seite 28
... ignorance , who choose that circumstance to commend their friend ( 97 ) by , wherein he most faulted . And to justifie mine owne candor , ( for I lov'd the man , and doe honour his memory ( on this side Idolatry ) as much as any . ) Hee ...
... ignorance , who choose that circumstance to commend their friend ( 97 ) by , wherein he most faulted . And to justifie mine owne candor , ( for I lov'd the man , and doe honour his memory ( on this side Idolatry ) as much as any . ) Hee ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Action affections Alcestis alwayes answer Aristotle BEN JONSON better busines Cæsar call'd Cicero Comedy counsell creatures delight discourse Divell doth Eloquence Epick epig 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 intire invent Iohn judgement King labour Lady Language laughter Learning lesse Lord Lysippus matter meere mind naturall nature never offended perfect person pides Plato Plautus Plutarch Poeme Poesie Poet Poetry praise preter Prince profit publike quæ quàm Queen Quintilian saith scorne Sejanus selfe sense shee shew Silent Woman Sophocles speake stile style Tacitus Theseus things thinke thought tion translated Truth tyme verses vertue vices Virgil vitious wher whole Wiat wise words write wrott wyfe yett