Seventeenth-century English ProseDavid Novarr Knopf, 1967 - 555 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 18
... whole discourse is a kind of picture of my owne disposition . " Each book reflects its author , not the divine who would be a physician , not the angler , but the whole man ; the subjects are not merely melancholy and angling but these ...
... whole discourse is a kind of picture of my owne disposition . " Each book reflects its author , not the divine who would be a physician , not the angler , but the whole man ; the subjects are not merely melancholy and angling but these ...
الصفحة 248
... whole or parts . And since the dimensions of the head measure the whole body , and the figure thereof gives conjecture of the principall faculties ; Physiognomy outlives our selves , and ends not in our graves . Severe contemplators ...
... whole or parts . And since the dimensions of the head measure the whole body , and the figure thereof gives conjecture of the principall faculties ; Physiognomy outlives our selves , and ends not in our graves . Severe contemplators ...
الصفحة 459
... whole Continent of America , which are the Mines of Potosi , yeild him but six in the hundred all expences defrayed . You write how King James sent privately to Sir Walter being yet in the Tower , to intreat and command him , that he ...
... whole Continent of America , which are the Mines of Potosi , yeild him but six in the hundred all expences defrayed . You write how King James sent privately to Sir Walter being yet in the Tower , to intreat and command him , that he ...
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