Character Writings of the Seventeenth CenturyHenry Morley G. Routledge, 1891 - Počet stran: 445 |
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Výsledky 1-5 z 38
Strana 25
... understanding of any- thing . Orange is the most humorous of the two , whose small portion of juice being squeezed out , Clove serves to stick him with commendations . Cordatus . The author's friend ; a man inly acquainted with the ...
... understanding of any- thing . Orange is the most humorous of the two , whose small portion of juice being squeezed out , Clove serves to stick him with commendations . Cordatus . The author's friend ; a man inly acquainted with the ...
Strana 26
... understandings , of which the design may only have been to prevent Sir Thomas Overbury from saying any- thing that could come to the ears of the world until the divorce was granted . But Lady Essex wished Sir Thomas Overbury to be more ...
... understandings , of which the design may only have been to prevent Sir Thomas Overbury from saying any- thing that could come to the ears of the world until the divorce was granted . But Lady Essex wished Sir Thomas Overbury to be more ...
Strana 31
... understanding intricate and full of windings ; he is the prima materia , and his intents give him form ; he dyeth his means and his meaning into two colours ; he baits craft with humility , and his countenance is the picture of the ...
... understanding intricate and full of windings ; he is the prima materia , and his intents give him form ; he dyeth his means and his meaning into two colours ; he baits craft with humility , and his countenance is the picture of the ...
Strana 36
... understanding , seeth them as things underneath . He covers not his body with delicacies , nor excuseth these delicacies by his body , but teacheth it , since it is not able to defend its own imbecility , to show or suffer . He ...
... understanding , seeth them as things underneath . He covers not his body with delicacies , nor excuseth these delicacies by his body , but teacheth it , since it is not able to defend its own imbecility , to show or suffer . He ...
Strana 40
... understanding were not honester than his will , no man should keep good conceit by him , for he thinks it no theft to sell all he can to opinion . His pedigree and his father's seal - ring are the stilts of his crazed disposition . He ...
... understanding were not honester than his will , no man should keep good conceit by him , for he thinks it no theft to sell all he can to opinion . His pedigree and his father's seal - ring are the stilts of his crazed disposition . He ...
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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