Character Writings of the Seventeenth CenturyHenry Morley G. Routledge, 1891 - Počet stran: 445 |
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Strana 16
... thought of writing such a book , at the diversities of manners among Greeks all born under one sky and trained alike . For many years he had considered and compared the ways of men ; he had lived to be ninety - nine . Our children may ...
... thought of writing such a book , at the diversities of manners among Greeks all born under one sky and trained alike . For many years he had considered and compared the ways of men ; he had lived to be ninety - nine . Our children may ...
Strana 17
... thought this the fittest task for the ninety - ninth year of his age , and the profitablest Monument that he could leave for a farewell to his Grecians . " There was some aim at short and witty sketches of character in descriptions of ...
... thought this the fittest task for the ninety - ninth year of his age , and the profitablest Monument that he could leave for a farewell to his Grecians . " There was some aim at short and witty sketches of character in descriptions of ...
Strana 19
... thought had not been in his purse ; for he willed his wife over- night to take out the same angel and lay it up until his coming home again , and he verily thought his wife had so done , which indeed forgot to do it . Thus , after ...
... thought had not been in his purse ; for he willed his wife over- night to take out the same angel and lay it up until his coming home again , and he verily thought his wife had so done , which indeed forgot to do it . Thus , after ...
Strana 22
... thought so ; and is so truly learned , that he affects not to show it . He will think and speak his thought both freely ; but as distant from depraving another man's merit , as proclaiming his own . For his valour , ' tis such that he ...
... thought so ; and is so truly learned , that he affects not to show it . He will think and speak his thought both freely ; but as distant from depraving another man's merit , as proclaiming his own . For his valour , ' tis such that he ...
Strana 23
... thought , might be of the common - council for his wealth ; a fellow sincerely besotted on his own wife , and so wrapt with a conceit of her perfections , that he simply holds himself unworthy of her . And , in that hoodwinked humour ...
... thought , might be of the common - council for his wealth ; a fellow sincerely besotted on his own wife , and so wrapt with a conceit of her perfections , that he simply holds himself unworthy of her . And , in that hoodwinked humour ...
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A. B. Grosart acquaintance actions APPARITOR believes better body Characters charity church clothes comes commendation commonly conceit conscience court creature dares death delight devil discourse diseases diurnal doth ears edition enemy face fashion fear fool fortune gentleman gives glory goes grace hand hates hath heart heaven heraldry hold Holinshed honest honour horse humour Joseph Hall judgment justice justice of peace keeps kind knows labour learning lives look man's men's mercy mind mountebank nature never NICHOLAS BRETON opinion patience Peter Bales Philip Bliss pleasure praise puritan reason religion scholar seldom servant shillings Sir Thomas Overbury soul speaks spirit stancy stands strange sure talk things thinks thought tongue truth Tyburn understanding unworthy valour vice virtue walk wears Westminster Hall wisdom wise words worse worthy WORTHY PRINCE