Curiosities of LiteratureLilly, Wait, Coleman, and Holden, 1834 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Abbé afterwards ambassador amidst ancient antiquary appears BACON Bibles bishop Boccaccio Buckingham called catholic character Charles church Cicero Coke collection copy court curious death declared discovered discovery Dudley Digges duke Duke of Anjou Earl edition Elizabeth England English favour favourite feelings forgeries France French French revolution genius George Steevens hand historian honour human imagined invention James Jesuits John Elliot king king's learned Lenglet letter liberty literary literary forgery lived Long Parliament Lord majesty manuscript ment mind minister monarch Montluc nation nature never observed OLDYS Oldys's parliament party passed passion persons Petrarch philosopher Plutarch poet political prediction preserved Prince principle printed proclamation protestants puritans queen religion remarkable royal Rump says scene secret history seems Series Sir Edward Coke sovereign speech spirit Steevens Tacitus things tion told toleration volume words writer
Pasajes populares
Página 191 - a letter on this occasion, he writes, ' My ambition now I shall only put upon MY PEN, whereby I shall be able to maintain memory and merit, of THE TIMES SUCCEEDING.' And many years after when he had finally quitted public life, he told the king, ' I would live to study, and not study to
Página 391 - Take not this as a threatening, for I scorn to threaten any but my equals ; but as an admonition from him, that, both out of nature and duty, hath most care of your preservations and prosperities :
Página 225 - the poet, amidst his gigantic conception of a scene, resolved to leave it out ; ' So vast a throng the stage can ne'er contain — Then build a new, or act it in a plain!' exclaimed 'La Mancha's knight,' kindling at a scene so novel and so vast ! Such an electioneering negotiation, the only one I am acquainted with, is opened in the 'Discours
Página 197 - read in schools, But to be freighted in the Ship of Fools. Such then was the fate of Lord BACON ; a history not written by his biographers, but which may serve as a comment on that obscure passage dropped from the pen of his chaplain, and already quoted, that he was more valued abroad than at home.
Página 357 - informing him, asked again how he thought to be saved ? He answered he could not tell. Yet thought that was a harder question than the other. I told him that the way to salvation was by Jesus Christ, God-man, who as he was man shed his blood for us on the cross,
Página 5 - primiero Che a te fede giurò, la fede osservi ? Or va ; repudia il valor prisco, e sposa L' ozio, e fra il sangue, i gemiti, e le strida Nel periglio maggior dormi e riposa ! Dormi, Adultera vii ! fin che omicida Spada ultrice ti svegli, e sonnacchiosa, E nuda in braccio al tuo fedel t
Página 283 - a final extract, take this full picture of royal misery — ' I must see company on my set days ; I must play twice a week ; nay, I must laugh and talk, though never so much against my will : I believe I dissemble very ill to those who know me ; at least, it is a great constraint to myself,
Página 195 - this censure, that a fool could not have written such a work, and a wise man would not.' A month or two afterwards we find that ' the king cannot forbear sometimes in reading the lord chancellor's last book to say, that it is like the peace of God, that surpasseth all understanding.
Página 126 - le grand devient petit, le riche devient pauvre, le monarque devient sujet — nous approchons l'état de crise et du siècle des révolutions. Que fera donc dans la bassesse ce satrape que vous n'aurez élevé que pour
Página 5 - dunque 1' onor, cosi conservi Gli avanzi tu del glorioso Impero ? Cosi al valor, cosi al valor primiero Che a te fede giurò, la fede osservi ? Or va ; repudia il valor prisco, e sposa L' ozio, e fra il sangue, i gemiti, e le strida Nel periglio maggior dormi e riposa ! Dormi, Adultera vii ! fin che omicida Spada