Seventeenth-century English ProseDavid Novarr Knopf, 1967 - 555 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 224
... passed over ; we 1 * Little directly , but Sea between your house and Greenland . 2 * The great Urnes in the Hippodrome at Rome conceived to resound the voices of people at their shows . 8 * Which makes the world so many years old ...
... passed over ; we 1 * Little directly , but Sea between your house and Greenland . 2 * The great Urnes in the Hippodrome at Rome conceived to resound the voices of people at their shows . 8 * Which makes the world so many years old ...
الصفحة 225
... passed world . Simplicity flies away , and iniquity ' comes at long strides upon us . We have enough to do to make up our selves from present and passed times , and the whole stage of things scarce serveth for our instruction . A ...
... passed world . Simplicity flies away , and iniquity ' comes at long strides upon us . We have enough to do to make up our selves from present and passed times , and the whole stage of things scarce serveth for our instruction . A ...
الصفحة 252
David Novarr. ion that the soul passed out that way , and a fondnesse of affec- tion from some Pythagoricall foundation , that the spirit of one body passed into another ; which they wished might be their own . That they powred oyle upon ...
David Novarr. ion that the soul passed out that way , and a fondnesse of affec- tion from some Pythagoricall foundation , that the spirit of one body passed into another ; which they wished might be their own . That they powred oyle upon ...
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
affections alwayes Anthony à Wood Bacon beleeve Ben Jonson blessed body bones burning Businesse character Christ Christian Church Compleat Angler Countrey dayes death Democritus desire discourse divine Donne Dorothy Osborne doth Earl edition England English essays farre father fear finde fire fools friends give Grace grave hath heart Heaven holy honour hope Hydriotaphia John John Aubrey John Bunyan John Donne John Milton Julius Cæsar King learned letters lives Lord Majesty matter melancholy mind nature never noble peece persons Plato poor Princes printed prose quæ Reader Religion rest Roman saith Scripture selfe Seneca sermon servant shew Sir Henry Wotton Sir Walter Raleigh soul speak spirit tell thee things thou thought tion unto Urnes vertue Walton wherein wife wise words Wotton write