THE PAN DICTIONARY OF FAMOUS QUOTATIONS Robin Hyman, the son of a well-known antiquarian bookseller, went into publishin...
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THE PAN DICTIONARY OF FAMOUS QUOTATIONS Robin Hyman, the son of a well-known antiquarian bookseller, went into publishing in 1955 after taking an honours degreein English. He was Managing Editor of Evans for severalyearsand in 1977 he became Chairrnan of Bell & Hyman. When Bell & Ilyman merged with Allen and Unwin in 1986, Robin Hyman becameManaging Director and later Chairman of the combined business, Unwin l{yman. He is currently President of the PublishersAssociation. Apart from compiling The Pan Dic'tionary of Famous Quotatiotts, Robin Hyman is author or joint author of severalbooks, including the very successt-ulBoys' and Girls' First Dictionary. With his wife Inge. he has written ttre storiesfor fifteen children's picture books, including RurtotluvJcrmesand the Night Owl and Pett r'.s M agic II ide-and-Seek. He and his wife live with their two sons and a daughter in Hampstead Garden Suburb.
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TI{E PAN DICTIONARY OF FAMOUS
auoTATIoNs compi
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This edition published 1993by GrangeBooks An tmprint of GrangeBooksLimited The Grange GrangeYard I.oNDON SEl3AG First published 1962asTheModemDictionaryof Quotatiotxby EvansBrothers L;td Paperbackedition published 1989by PanBooksLtd 1989 O RobinHymanL%2,L973,1983, ^ ISBN 1 856273636 This book is sold subjectto the condition that it shall not, by nny of trade or otherwise,be lent, esold, hired out or otherwisecirculatedwithout the pub lisher's prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition includrngthis conditionbeing imposedon the subsequentpurchaser. Printed and bound in Great Britain by Mackaysof Chatham plc
Introduction The Pm Dictionary of FarnousQrctations has been planned as a useful and compreiensive work of referenceand also as a book which I hope will give pleasureto readerswho useit as an anthology.The selwtionof entries,aswell asthearrangementin single rather than doublecolumn, is intendedto encourage the browserin addition to anyonelooking up specific quotations.The number of quotationgselectedfrom an author is not" of course, ffiy indication of the author's populariry or literary merit. Someauthors, like Pope-andWilde, wrote in an epigrarnmaticform which lends itself well to quotation; by comparison few novelists,apart from Dickens,havethis partictrlar quality. The criterionin selectionis what is likely to be lhmiliar to the generalreaderwhosemother tongrreis English.A few quotationsaneincludd from French, Crerman,Greek, Italian, Latin and Spanishsourms which seemlikely to be known to many readersand in all such casesa translation is given. As well as quotationsover one thousandproverbsare included. Often one doesnot know whethera familiar phrase is proverbial or whether it has a specific literary helpful to includethe ori$n. Becauseof this it see,med proverbs. best-kno_wn It is bften extremelydifficult to assessthe degree of famitiarity of quotationsand this is_particulanly true when c6nside-ringwhat to include fto4-yriling Which of the following, and speechof recent-years. for example, ff€ likely to be rememberedin the 20[0i? 'year 'Onesrrull stepfor man,onegiantleapfor mcnkind.' Neil Armstreitg,the first ma-non themoon' 21 July 1969
Infioducdon
'Fiveper cent? Fiveper cent? Youmustbe 9ut lf your ininrJs.'Prince Philip on the birthrate in the SolomonIslands,1982 'As I look ahead,Iamfilled withforeboding. Like the Roman I seem to see "the river Tiber foaming with muchblood".'EnochPowell,Speechon immigration, Birminghamn20 April 1968 'f havelived seventy-eightyearswithoutheartngof bloody places like Cambodia.' Sir Winston Churchill, 28 April 1953, as quoted in Lord Moran's book on Churchill in 1966 'Fromnow,thepomd is worth14per centoi soless in tgrmsof othercurrencies, ft doesnotmeanrofcourse, that thepoundherein Britainrinyourpocketorpurse or in your bank,hasbeendevahrcd.'HaroldlVilson, Speechafterdevaluationof thepound,20Nov. 1967 'fn a hierarchyevery employeetendsto rise to his Ievel of incompetenie.'LauienceJ. Peterand Raymond Hull, The PeterPrineiple,1969 'Please accept my resignation. I don't want to belongto an, club tltat will acceptmeasa member.' Groucho Marx, attributed 'Tlrcre can be no whitewash at the White House.' Richard Nixon on Watergate,April 1973 'Euery so often_I lose weightand, to my horror and indignatiory, I find in thequietof thenightsomebody hasput it back on.' Lord Goodman,1973 'More will meanworse.' KingsleyAmi s, Encounter, 1960 Mq"V- quotations from the twentieth century are includedin this book but, as the test for selectionis that a quotation is likely to remain well knoum for severalyears, I have, of course,excludedmost current televisionand radio sayings,advertisingslogans ?nd political phrases.I hoie in a future eEitioi to have the opportunity of ionsidering whether the
IntrodncdonandAclumwte&pmmts
tenquotationsaboveandmanyothersfrom literature andipeechof the lastfew yeaisshowsignsof standing the testof time. The quotationsin the book have been arranged alphabeticallyby author and, whereverpossible,line referenceshave been given in poems,and act and scenereferencesin plays. The name of the speaker hasbeengivenin all quotationsfrom plays,and this enablesone to find out without referenceto the original test that, for example,it wasMarcellus,and not Hamlet or Horatio as one might havesupposed, isrottenin thestateof Denmarkn. whosaid,'Something A comprehensive index with over 25,000entries has beenprovidedat the enclof the dictionary and this containsthe key words in each quotation, It gtvesnot only the pagereferetr@,but the numberof the quotationon the page.From this index it is easy to trace quickly a half-rememberedquotation by looking up one of the key words and, also, should onereferto individualwordsin the indexlike manor beauty,to find quotationson thesesubjects.Referencesin most casesare to the Oxford Editions of StandardAuthors, brrt line referencesobviouslyvary from edition to edition with authors, Iike Shakespeare,who wrote partly in proseandpartly in poetry. RosN
HvtrtlN
Acknowledgements Many friends gave encouragementand helpful adviceduring the five years of preparation of this book. Thanks are due in particular to the Rev. S. R. Cutt for his assistancein the selection of quotationsfrom the Bible; Mrs. E. M. Hatt who undertookthe immensetask of compiling the index; and Miss Barbara Hall and Miss PamelaJonesfor their careful checking of the proofs. Librarians in England and the United States have answered numerous enquiries with great courtesy, and the staff of the liritish Musetin have beei'especially Fetp{ul. The verification of contemporaryreferences has in many cases.been made easier bjr the ready co-operatioi of the writers and speakerithemsehei.
MY MOTHER AND FATIIER
whotaughtme to enjoyreading
A Dictionary of FamousQuotations ACION, JohnEmeri6 Eilwlrd Dalberg,tst Baron l8g{-tg02 I Powertendsto comrpt, aod absolutepower comrpts absoluteln Great men are almo-stalways bad men . . . Theie is ao worig heresythan that the office sinctifies the holder of it.
u"''#!,F,rr"Wi#iintl?#ii
ADAl\fiS, John QuincV, l7tl-l848 2 Think of your forefathers! Think of your posterityt Speech, Plyrrcuth, Massachuseas, 22 Dei. IB02 N)Al\ffi, Sarah Ftower, 1S{Xt-1848 3 Nearer, my God to thee, Nearer to theel Ben though it be a crosg That raiseth me,
Nearer,tW Gd, to thee
ADDISON, JoseBh,ltl?A7lg 4 Tis not in mortals to command slncess, But we'll do more, Sempronirs; we'll dpsetle it. BoRfiIlt Cato, Act I, Scene2 5 Ihe woman that deliberatesis lost. MARcTAIb, Act 4, SceneI 6 Thrs I live in the world rather as a Spectatorof mankind, qan as one of the species,by which means I have made myself a qpeculativestatesman,soldier, me,rchant,ild artisan, without ercr meddling with any practicat -part of life. The Spectanr, No.7, I M&ch 1711 I!, No.!,11 7 Sundayclears awaJrths rust of the whole week 9 July ITII 8 tSri' fugnltold them, with the air of a man who would not giro hir jodggtent rashln that 'much might be said on both sides'. Ib, No. 122,20 JuIy 17II 9 The qpaciousfirmament on high, With all the blue etherealr$l, And spangledheavens,a shining framo, -Ib, Their l*it Original pioclaim. No. 465,23 Aot. 1712,Ode l0 A woman seldomasksadvice until shehas bought her wedding olotheg. Ib, No.475r 4 Sept,1712
Addbo
t0
1l S/e are alwaln doing somethingfor pmterity, but I would fain seeposteritt do something for us. TIU Spectator,No. 583, n Arg. I7I1 pea€ t2 SeEin what a Ctristian can dis. I-astwords
c. lGill ADR !hs, 13 Mattheq Marb Ir*B andJohn, Tho bedbe bl€stthat I lio on Four angelsto my be4 Four an[etsroudCry hca4 Oneto watch,and onc to Pray, And two to bearmy soul away. AXINS, Z*. r886-195t 14 Thc Gr€ek8Had a Tlrordfor IL
A C@rdlehtlu Dnk
Itth of play,Igil)
AIdJnt, 736i-804 ts thc voioeof God. 15 Yoxpoplt, vox&I.Tho voie of th pople - =Izttq to C,lwlenryw AIDRICII' Hcy, lffl-t?lt0 f6 If all be tnre tbat I do think' we Sould drink: Thercarefive rcasolug Good wine- a friend- or beiggdrYOr lest wesbouldbe by andWReawtsfu Drhl*g Ot -y otherrcasonwhy. AIEIAI{DE& Codl fnnoes' $fF1805 17 All thingsbrigbt and bcautifrrl" AUireatires f:neatand+mall, All thinspwisean! wonderful, Tbe-LordGod madethemall Ailndtgs BrEItt od Beauttfw 18 Tbo rich man in his castle, The poor rnan at his ggte' God made th€m, high or lowln Ad order'd their estate. 19 Onoe in royal David's cigr -she4 Stood I lowlY cattle TVhe,rea Mother laid her Baby In a manggr for His bed: Mary was thal Mother milE J€sui 6rist h€r little child"
OncEIn fuyal Dntts CitY
Aqru
lt 20 llcro ic a grecohill far sway, Without a sity qra[" Whcroths dearLord wascnnifiod, Who dicd to saw rtsall AII,AII{I'AL
ThcrcIs a Gturt Eil
Allb6 lr6mc d" 17qF1733
2l Eenturas desrtclresss. or g**ffofn A srrpcrf,uitt
r, 1726
ALTINGIIAIWImnhn' tm+r889) tl Up theairvmormtain Obwrl tlbiushy gleq Ws daren't go a-hmti4g For fesr of linls nelu
ThcFebt
fUnnOSm,ST:l{0t"S97? 23 StlbcrlsRomre,Ronwtottvlto,ruci
S{frarft alibl, vivitotlsd U. livs ar W[Gnin Rone, liw astbs Romansdo: urtco 6[3cqthpr€' tbst line clron'bo. Adrrocto5bfugttttbnrgwtd bl tffi,
ANDnSEltq, I&E tffiu' U T}r_uglyDuc&ling.
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ANOITIYIUOIIt Ailrerdm
di'lrw * what 25Daddy,
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M 26 DrintaplntamiflcE{gy. nigb0. tl Ftlday nigbt b Ana'mi 28 Guinomi is gooitforYou. Wo rcattynffisaft t RdIry Poster,193%1945 29 Is yornJourncy Paldlvc W 30 fhat rchootgirlcomplcrim. Wilt IE G?CIrt 31 Stopmoandbqy * 32 Ttrly comsasa boonandabtcsdngto mr Tho-Pickteidt,Tto OTILandtho Wavcrlcypco. ta}r.lheTfis. 33 TopPloopte be'Ms HIt 34 St;ilh a gnigraa bor trcilh I'vttu n 35 You waDItbs bcrt HtsS rr harothlo 3i MIk Mfraftg
Anqynru
t2
Bqtlad.e 36 In Scarlettoum, where f was born, There was a fair maid dwellid, Made everyyouth cry Well;gwaYl Her name was Barbara Allen.
turbara n*rtrf;I:P,
37 The Kiog sits in Dunfermline town Drinkhg the blude red wine. 38 To Norowan to Norowa-y' To Noroway o'er the faem; The Kingls daughter o'NorowaY, 'Trs thou must bring her ha"me. 39 There wers three ravenssat on a tr@' They were as black as theY might be. The one of them said to his make, 'lVhere shall we our breakfast takef 40 As I was walking all alano I heard twa corbfesmaking a mane: The tane unto the tither did say' .Whrf shall we gang and dine lie day?'
Sir Patrick Spens,I
Ib,13
I'heTlree Ravensrl
The TTa Corbies
Epitrpfs 4l Here lie I and mY four dauglters' KiUed bv drinkirie Chelte'nhan wat'ers. Had we-but stick-to Epsom salts, *e wouldn't haw beei in thesohere vaults' Clplteiluttt Watcrs by Ughlnigg! kitled was ma,n who -_ Herelies a 42 He died when his prospectsseemtil to be biightening' He mieht bave sut'a flish in this world of trouble, bt-, anC ne fies in the stubble. At Great if,it tUTi*d Torrtngtun,Devon "ut tired' always 43' Here lies a Door woman who *as Shelived ida housewhere help wasn'tbit"di Her last words on earth were:-'E)earfriends' I am going to whe,rethere's no cookin'r or washing,or sewing' For errerythingthere is exact to nry wishe-s, F;; ;dfi UrJvOo"'t eat there's nb washingof dishes. I'll be where loud anthemswill alwaysbe ringing' But having no voice I'll be gui! of the singtng' Dorft moirn for me now' dbdt mourn for me never' iam Coiogto do nothingfor ever altd €ver" On a Tired Housewlfe
^t3
Anryum
4f Here lies my wife, Here lies she; Hallelujahl Hallelujeel Ar Leeds 45 Here lies the body of Richard Hind, Who was neither ingenious,sober,nor kind. On Nclwrd Hilrd 46 Here lies the body of Mary Ann Lowder, She burst while drinking d seidlitz powder. Called from the world to her heavenlyrest,
Sheshouldbavewaitcdtill it efferv€sced.
On*Hftr,
4fl Here lies TVill Smith- and, what's somethingrarish, He was born, bred, and hanged,all in the sameparish. 'On Wiil Smtth to rest, gone has Ann Mary 48 Safeat last on Abraham's brcast' \lVhich may be nuts for Mary Ann, Muy Am But is ertainly rough on Abraham. 49 Strangsrl Approach this spot with gravityl A Denttst John Browa is filling his last cavity. $ This is the gra\rcof Mfte O'Day Who died rilaintaining his right of way. His right was clear, his witl was strong. X)th centwy But hd'sjust as dead as if he'd beentttoqg. tlnericJts 5l Tbere was a faith-healer of Deal, Tl/h9said, 'Althgugh pain isn't r€al, If I sit on a pin And it punct-uresmy skin, I dislike ri'trat I fancyi feel.' 52 There was a young lady of Riga, Who went for a ride on a tiger; They returned from the ride With the lady inside' And a smile od the face of the tiger. 53 There was a young man of Boulogne lVho sanga most topical song. It wasn't the words That frightened the birds, But the honible doubleentendre. 54 There was a young man of JaPan \lVhoselimericks Deverwould scan;
AnWnm
t4
When they said it was so, He replied, 'Yes, I knoq But I alwaystryto get as many words into the last line as everI possiblycan.' 55 There was a young woman called Starkie, Who had an affair with a darky. The result of her sins \Masquadruplets,not twinsOne blaik, and one whitg and two khaki. 56 There was an old man from Darjeeling' Who boardeda bus bound for Ealing, He sawon the door: 'Pleasedon't spit on the floor', So he stood up alndspat on the ceiling. 57 There's a wonderful family called Stein, There's Gert and there's EPp end there's Ein; Gert's poemsare bunkt Epp's statuesare junk, Anti io one can uniierstand Ein. For other limericks,seeArnold Bennett(33'.l2),A- H. R Buller gA i Sz),A. H. Euwer(134:53),M. E. Hare (118i 98),.R.A,Kno: (209: 38) trgi : zgi, Eewarc I-d (195: OSane 60, D. L. Merritt (2Vtz 52). and W. C, Monkhou* Play 58 Everyman, I will go with thep a-n9be thy gurde'
gobyW t'u"'rffiWi#ffo%r, needio Iothvmost
Poemsad Saylngs 59 A beast,but a just beast. Of Dr Tenple, Hea&nasterof &gby 60 From ghouliesand ghostiesand long'teggetybeasties And tfi.iogt that go b"qp' in the oignt, Scottishprayer aooA uo?6, deliier us! 61 I{e that fights and runs avtay Musarun Delictae(17th May live tb fight another daY. centwfl 'How our own of life home the from different, different,howvery 62 -' tivtn S. Co6b,A Laugh a Day..Remarkof O"ur qnr.ol'
afteraperfomwt*"f *ff:Iffi IadX Yictorian
t5
Anorynou
63 I alwayseat peaswith honey I've done it all my lifo, They do taste kind of funny, But it keepsthem on the knife. Peas 64 I know two things about the horse, And one of themisrathercoar$c. Thefrorse(20thuntury) 65 If all the world w€re palFr, And all the seawere ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, If- AA the World werePaper What should we do for drink? (17th centiry) 66 King Charlesthe First walked and tatked Half an hour after his head was sut off. PeterPuzzlewell, A ClroiceCollectlonof 'Nddles, Clnrades,and Rebuses(18th centurfl took an axo Borden 6l figzie And gaveher mother forty whacks; When shesaw what shehad done, On qt Amertcannbl 9f tlv Shegaveher father fort5r-ono. Igg0,s 68 Miss Bussand Miss Bealo Cupid's darts do not feel How different ftom us, On Tlvo Tictorlan Eeadmlstresses Miss Bealeand Miss lluss 69 Pleassto remember The Fifth of November, Guy FawkesDay Gunpowder treason and plot. 70 The rabbit has a charming fa,ce; TTteRabblt (20th centur!) Its prirnatelife is a disgraco. ?1 Sumeris ictrmenin Lhude sing sucut anCbloweth med Groweth d-e,O And springth the wude nu, Swner is lcumen In (I3th ceilu$ gbngs ?2 Absencemakesthe heart grow fonden 73 The animals went in one bY one' There's one moneriver to ctoss. ?4 As f sat on a sunnYbank' On Christmas DaY in the morning' I spied three shipJ come sailing bY.
Davison,Poetical Rlapsody, 1602 One More Nver Carol, As I sat on a Swny Bonk
Anrynm
t6
75 Begone,dull carcl I pritbeo begoneftom mel
Eegone, dullcare,youandI sballneverqgree. *Sorc
76 The bells of hell go tine-a-linq-a-lins v v For you but not ior mi.
arc@min',oho,oho. n Tfu Campbells
fr!!
Sory of I9I*1918 War
*
***8#;
78 Comelandlor4fill thsflowingbowt, Until it doth lrro ovef,. . . For tonight we'll merr)r, merry - be, _ Come,I-andlord, Fill tle Tomorrd-wwe'll be sober. Flmi4g hwl dads' 79 &ae tassesand lads, get learn ofyorn And asrayto the Ma5polo hie, For enerSlhe has got him a sbo' &ne lasss odl"ads And the fiddler's standing by. rising was the $m morning, as 80 Early one iust I h€afll a maid singftg in the vall_rybelow: 'Oh, don't deeirrc me; ObnDseetrlearrcmel fuily Orc Momlng Hori coutd Jrouuse I [,oor maidcn so? theycould lorre, how and lordee, we,rc lovers, Johnny 8l Frankie and Swore to be true t6 eachother, truo 8!ttbe stars above; He was her man, but he dons her wrong. Frat*lc utd Jolauy 82 God rcst vou merny,ge,ntlem€n, Gd Rcstyou Merry Let nothiig you di-iiy. my was all 83 Greensleeves ioy, Greensleev€swas mY delight' was my fi€art 6f gotd' Grcenslogves Grcetaleeves And who brn t-zdy Greeirdtbrcs, &f Hq h4 he you'and Eor \he Lfale Brownfug Litile drowri;ug dodt i torp theel . . . 85 Here's a neatin unto his Maiesty, Conftrsion to his €,nemies,. . And he that will not drink his healtb' I wish him neithe,rwit nor wealthn frerds a flealth mto hls Nor yet I rolto to hant himself. Mai'estY 86 Hero w€ come gathering nuts in lvlay Nuts in Man On a cold and fros[l morning. E7 Tbe holly and tbe ,"y,
Whcotfty u* both-fuitgroun,
Chtl&ctfsturg
t7
Anrynm
Of atl the treesthat are in tho woo{ Tho holly b€arsthe crown Th.orising of the sun And tbo running of tho deer, The playing of the merrJrolgan, Swit tiro$;g in the cho-ir. &rol, ru Holty otd the lvy 88 I feel no pain, dear mother, now But oh, I am so dryl O taks ms to a brewery Slrnty And leavsme the,rcto-dio. 89 In Dublin's fair city, wherp tho girls are so Prstty, I first set mv eyeson sweetMolly Malons. As sbs wn&rcd hpr wbdbarro-w, through strcets broad and
narro% Cyting,Coc&l€sandmussetstalivo,dive, Ot
Cocklesad Mussls
bd src'twas no wonder, 90 Shpwasa fishmonger, Ib For gowerehcr llfher andmothcrbefon 9l In goodKing Charles'sgoldcodayr, Wb€,ntoftalg ao harmmcant' A realousHlgh ChurchmanwasI, Ihc Yict of bcl And soI got prefermeoL 92 And this is laq that ru naintain, Unto ny dyingday,Srr, lffng shallrcigp, Ttat whatsoever Ib fil bo tho Vicarof Bran Sir. good nerrt wiso, is to bo and It 93 It is goodto bo homt andtnn It is Sestto be otrwith tho old lott, Sows E€foroJrouaroon with tbs ncw. v of hslerd@d
S;u{an41835
% My Bonniois orrcrthe oean, tbo sca, My Bonnieis onGf, My Bonnieis ovtr ths oean' My hmle Oh, bring backmy Bonnioto mo. tho weaving at 95 Now f ama barielor, I liw by myaelfandI work trade, And the only only thing that I everdid wronE Sory Weaver's \ilas to woo'afafr youig maid" said'It/hat she died: near 96 Shesighed,shocrio4 shodanned sballI do? SoI took her into bedandcoveredup h€rhpad Ib Justto s*w htr from tho fog6y,foggi dew.
Aqymm
t8
97 Oh, f wentdownSouthfor to seony Sa,L Sing'Polly-wolly-doodle'atlthedayl PollyVollyDoodk
onashiningnight, e8oh,'tismyderight T#i;tr;f#i:r|;""Iffi;
99 Old soldiers never die3 Wu Song,1914-191 Tltey only fade away. I O, Shenandoah,I long to hear you Shenandaah Away, you rolling rivea 2 O ye'll tak' the high road, and I'll tak'the tow road, Add I'll be in Scotlandafore ye, But me and my tnre love will nevermeet again, On the bonnie, bonnie banks o' lnch Lomon'. TheBomte Bar*s o' Inch Lornor' 3 She wiilr poor but showas honest Vistim of a rich man's game. First he loved her, then-heleft her, And shelost her maidenname. Slp wasPoor but shewasfronest 4 Seoher on the bridge at midnight, Sayine'Farewell, blighted love.' Tlien-a scnearn,a spEsh and goodness, Ib lVhat is shea-doint of? 5 ft's the samethe whole world over' It's the poor wot gets the blamo, ft's the rich wot sets the graw. Ib Ain't itgll a blee-tlin'shate?' 6 Some talk of Alexander, and somoof Hercules, Of Hector and Lysander,and such great namesas these; But of alt the world's braveheroesthel€'s nonethat cancomparo With a to% row, ro% row, ro% row for the British Grenadier. Tln British Grenadiers 7 Ttre sons of the prophet were brave men and bold' And quite unaoiust6medto fear, But tlie bravest by far in the ranks of the Shah Abdul the Bulbul AmIr Was Abdul the Bulbul Am,ir. 8 Swine low sweetchariot, Comi-rf for to carry me home, I looked over Jordin ad what did I seo? A band of Angels coming after Bor _ ,Sning Low, SweetChariot Comin' for to-carry me [ome. kind' There is a lady sweetand 9 'Was neverfarb so pleasedmy mind; I did but seeher passingby, PasslttgBy And yet I love hei tiu l-di6;
Amrynms 10 There is a tavern in the town, And there my dear lorrosits him deyan And drinks his wino'mid lauglter freg And never,Deverthinks of mb. Therels a Tavernh the Town ll Fare thee well, for I mrst leavethee, Do not let this parting grievethee, And rememberthat the-bestof friends must part. Ib t2 Tom Fearse,Tom Pearso,le,ndme your grey maro, AII along, down along out along Lee. For I want for to go to lViddicombe Fair, Wi'Bill Brewer, Jan Stewer,Feter Gurney, Peter Davey, Dan'l
whiddon, HarryHawk, oldunclsrom Wh\if#t#
13 We'reherebecause we'ro wo'rehercbecauso we'rchenebecause b€r€. Anry SotgrI9I+1918 14 \lVhatshaltwo do with the dnmke,nsailor Earlvin the morning? Hodrav andup sho-riseg Eatly ii tnem6rning. Whd shollwedo withtlreDrmken Wr? fhone
natmttertiberttt $ uWet Esaitet wqmrw"r*r,
16 Rcrwonsd nosmoutotg.I.etss refirrnto our sb€cp(ilo. to ths Mdfire PArrePdlrelin zubject). Gr€et 17 Nothingin exoess
h the tenpleai ntpU
Iafin glory of God. 18 ,4dnaJoremDelglorlam.To the greater Moaobf tie Soactyof lesas 19 Et in Arcdia ego.ltoo am in Arcadia" Insrptbn on tomb lgitur, 20 Gaudeonas hmenes dumswtus sory Q3tl Students' I.et us be happywhileweareyormg. enttny) change' andwe fu, illis.Times 2l Teworamutottur,et rlncnutorur c,hange with them" Qwtedh Hanisor4Deseiptbnof Anffi
Arablan Nights
20
ARABI.AN NIGHTS
,t
m:#ll
change forne1onfl.ir;ri:;:]n;;;; oldlamps
23 Open Sesamel
TheHistory af Ali Baba
ARCHTMEDES, 287-212 B,e. 24 Give me a firm placeto stand,and I will movethe earth. On the Lever 25 I havefoundit! [Eurekall On makinge discovery
ARTSTOTLE,3W322 B.e. 26 Man is by naturea politicalanimal.
Politics, Book I 27 Inferiors revolt in order that they may be equal,and equalsthat they may be superior. Suchis the stateof mind whiChcreates revolutions. Ib, Book 5 28 Plato is dear to me, but dearerstill is truth. Attributed ARNOLD, George, 1834-1865 29 The living need charity more than the dead.
Thelolly OId Pedagogue
ARNOLD, l\fiattheu 1822-1888 30 The seais calm to-night, The tide is full, the moon lies fair Upon the Straits. Dover Beach 31 Is it so small a thing To have enjoy'd the sun, To have lived light in the spring, To haveloved, to have thought, to have done? Empedocleson Ettm 32 comq, dear children, let us away; Down and away below. Tke ForsakenMernun 33 Children dear, was it yesterday (Call yet once) that slie went iway? Ib 34 She left lonely for ever Ib Tlre kings of ihe sea. life it Who saw steadiln and saw whole: 35 Sownts, To a Ftiend The mellow glory of the Attic stage. 36 Wandering betweentwo worlds, one dead, The GrandeChartreuse The other powerlessto be born.
2t
Amold
37 Strewon her roses,roses, And never a spray of yew. In quiet shereposes: Aht woutd that I did too. 38 Tonight it doth inherit The vastyHall of Death. 39 Go, for they call you, Shepherd,from the hill.
Requieseot Ib The Scholar Gtpsy,I lb,20 lb,35
40 A11the live murmur of a summer'sday. 41 Tired of knocking at Preferment'sdoor. 42 Beforethis strangediseaseof modernlife, lb,203 With its sick hurry, its divided aims. 43 Still nursingthe unconquerablehope, Ib, 2II Still clutching the inviolable shade. 44 Othersabideour question.Thou art free. V/e ask a'ndask: ihou smilestand art still, Slnkespeare Out-topping knowledge. Sohraband Rustum 45 Truth sits upon the lips of dying men. 46 And that sweetCity with her dreamingspires Sheneedsnot Jundfor beau{r's heighiening, lof O*fordl Thyrsis, 19 {l t?orepursuit of perfection, then, is the purzuit of sweetnessand Culture ad,4narchy light. 48 Thus we have got three distinct terms, Barbarians, Philistines, Populace,t9 09.n9!eroughly the three great classesinto which Ib our societyis divided. 49 Home of lost causes,and forsakenbeliefs,and unpopulor rl€tlllesr
loyaltiesl andimpossible
tof oxforal !;;t;ri;rf:I,:;il;
50 I am bound by my oqn definition of sriticism: a disinterested endeavourto iearir and propagate -Ib, the best that is known and
thoughtin theworld.
Functions "f ""ir:::h"!ri#
51 In poetry, no lessthan in life, ho is 'a beautiful and ineffectual u&t, bdating in the void his luminous wings in vain.' lof Shellfi,l Ib, Secord Series passion andlight, and (what is more) for sweetness 52 Ctrlture is the -Literature md Dognta, the passionfor making them prcvail. Preface 53 Culttre, the acquainting ourselveswith tho best that has been knounr inA saidin the frorl4 and thus with tho history of tho Ib human qpirit.
Artrold ARNOLD, Thomas' 1795-.t842 54 What we must look for here is, first, religiors and moral pfin: ciples; secondty, gentlemanly conductf thirdly, int€ltectual ,4ilress to ltts Scli,tlss at @by atiiUty. 55 Mv obiect will be, if possible to fom (hristian meo' for Ctiristiln boJrsI can scarcelyhoPoto mako. Letter on qlnhtltent'as Ee&twtq of ktgbY, 1828 ASAF, Cccge (GeorgeIL PowelD' 18$-1951 56 \lVhat's the use of worrying? It uever was worth while, So, pack up your troubtes in your old tit'bag, And smilo, smilsr smile. Pack ,lp yow Tloufus h yw oA m'W ASOLIilIIr
Q9I5t
Herbert Henry, lC Esrl of Orforil tnd Arytt,
18lt!-194 57 Wait andseo.
Y&lotts WpelBEr I9I0
AT DEN' WEhn Hugt, UNI-ln3
58 To sa\leYour world you astrcdthig rnan to dio: t"!y? no% Wonld tf,is man, coutC bo sceyou 'Wqnf* "tkot Anlnovt SoIdIq iWs must bo realistig-' 59 When statesmengravety sayqrc,akanc therefop pacifistic: and urercrort they'rd wea$ are they're The chancesarc ltasu$rc: But wbsr they speakof Principles- look out - FrhaF F, Foomotes gpn€ral are already atreadyPoring over malto. Their gpn€rals my love, head, your sleeping 6O Lay Iillaby Human on my faithless af,trt. 6l To the man-in-the-street'who, Im sorry to say Is a kee,lrobsenrcrof life, The word Intellectual zuggestsstraieht away Note on Intellectwls A man who's untrue to fr6 wife. 62 Our researchersinto hrblic Opinion are content That he beld the proper opinions for the time of year; when_therewas wa^r' when there was -ieace,- he was for peace; ' T'heUt*nown Ctttzen he wEnt. AUGUSTINE Str 354'tX) 63 Give me chastity and continenco,but not yet.
CorfessbtsrS
23
Ansten
AUSTEN' Jane, tn*fifl 64 The veomanryare preciselythe order of peoplewith whom I feel I cadhavenoiningto do. A degreeortw6 loiver, and . . . I might hope to be useful to their families in somewa)ror other. EMMA Emtno,Ch,4 65 One half of the world cannot understandthe pleasuresof tho Ib, Ch,g other. Elr,ti,IA
66 Nobodyishealthyin Inndon,nobodycanbe. * *r?,"Jf."ij towardsthosewhoarein 67 Humannatureis so well disposed
interestingsituations,that a young Person,who either marriesor Ib, Ch.22 dies, is sure of beiog ki"dly spoken of. hardty friendship bring money' but 68 Business,you know, may Ib, Ch, 34 ever doeg.- JoHNKMGITTLBT 69 It willr I believe,be errerlmherefoun4 that as the clergy are, or aro not what they ought to be, so are t!e_res! of the nation. Mansfeld Park, Ch.g TDMIND 70 To sit in the shadeon a fine dan and look uPon verdure is tho Ib, Ch.g most perfectrefreshment. FAttt{Y
7l l,at otherpensdwellon guilt andmisery.
Ib, ch.48
72 Bnt are they all horrid, aro you snryqtley are all horrid? . Nortlwger Abbey, Ch. 6 cATsRrNBMoRr.AI\tD 73 A wornan, especially if she harrc tho misfortune of knowing Ib, Ch. 14 anything, should concealit as well as shecan. 74 One does not lovs a placo the less for having suffered in it' rmlessit has all beensiffering, nothing *, Ch. 20 Hr*hn, ?5 It is a truth universally acknowledged,that a single man in
must* forture ofagood possession
##f;Jii?ri,ii;,
ch.r
76 Happinassin marriage is entirely a matter of chance. Ib, Ch.6 Ib, Ch.I0 ?7 Howcanyoucontrive to unite so even?MIssBINGT-Yv ?8 It is happy for Youthat you possessthe talent of flattering with delicac{.-Mav i ask whethef thesepleasing attentions proceed from Uie imfutse of the moment, oi are tf,e result of-pievious Ib, Ch. 14 study? MnbpNr.IE'r me: I aT takes with qgeql nobody my side, ?9 Nobody is on Part used, nbboCy fe.6bfor my pobr nerves. MRIIBENNETIb, Ch.48 of an employElinor, 'that the pteasantness 80 'f am afraid' replied -always
mentdoesnot
its propriefr.' evince
Sr^n#ii5n%
Ansteo
u
81 IVhat dreadful hot weatherwe havel It k€ePsme in a continual I*tter, 18 Sept.1796 stats of inelegance, AU$IIN' Alfred' 1835-1913 82 An earl by right, by courtesy a mall. 83 Across the wires the electric mess4ge@Ine3
.Heisnobetter, hoism.ch*"
BACON, fhrcbr
T'heSeason
T;u, *:iifr::W,i{:ifr
lst Baru Vcrulamr'tffil-16?5
*ffifrU#ffi toMens home, . . r colno 34MyEssayes
85 Wbat is truth? saidjesting Pilato,and would not stayfor an f.;rsolI.'Of Trwh ansryre,r, 86 Men feardeath,aschildrenfearto go in the dark;-aqdaslhat tales,soisthe othetr natural fear in im{ren ig incmeaseA-witn 2. Of Deuh infant, little and to a born; to bo as tl ltis naturalto dio PerbaPs' rb tho onois aspainful as ths othctr' 3. Of Wdtytu Rel$bn 88 All colourswill agreoin the dark is a kind of wild iustie; whichtho morcEan'EnafiIl! 89 Rg[r€6se 4. Of R*erye runsti, the mot! oughttdw to w€edit ouL 90 Prosperityis tho bl€ssingof tbe OtdTcstarnent;adwrsityis qP 5. Of AdlcrsltY bhdng ,if tns New. andadvcsiE 91 nnosperityis not withoutmanyfearsanddistastes; rb hopes. and comforts is not without best doth advensity brrt vie; }2 Prosperitydoth best discowr rD discoverYirhte. hs knorveth what talk will also knovrcth, bc what that talketh 93 He and Dissttrulatton 6. Of Sintulotton noL andso aretheir Friefsandfears. 94 the joys of parentsarosecneq 7. Qf Pueits andChildren 95 Childrcn swecteolaboursrbut they mako misforttmesBoro Ib bitter. to fortune; grreo hostages bath and childre' 96 He that hath wife eitherof virtuo enterPrises, to gr€at for they aro imlrcdiments 8. Of Marrirye and SiryleLife oimisfirief. for middloage; companions areyoungm€o'smistresses; }f TViues Ib min'g rlurs€xl' and old
2t
Eom
98 He was reputed one of tho wise men, that made answ€,rto ths question,whe,na man should marry? A young man not Jrct,an elder man not at all. 8. Of Marriage and SingleLife 99 Nuptial love malcethmankind; friendly love -perfecteth it; but wanton love comrpteth and embasethit. 10.Of Love 1 Me,nin greatplacesare tbrice seryants3seryantsof the sorrereign or stat€; seryantsof fa^me;and servantsof business. II. Of GreatPlace 2 Therc is in human nahre generatlymoto of tf,e fool tban of tbo wise. 12,Of fuI&tess 3 If tho hilt will not coms to Mahomct, lvlahomet wiU go to tho hill. Ib 4 In charity therc is no sf,€ss. 13.Of Goo&ess,and eAuss of Natwe 5 If a man be graciors and cornteousto strangers, it shervB be is a e citizen of thE world. Ib 6 New nobility is but the ac{ of -lnwer; but ancient nobfity is ths act of timo.14.of frobility ? So when any of the four piltars of govmment arc mainty shaken or weake,ned(which aro religion, justice, counset,and trcasure),men had Dpedto psay - for fah qfcath€r. 75.Of Sedttittttsnd Tbotfrles 8 Money is lfte mrck, not god emceptit bo sprcad. Ib 9 The rcmcdy is worse than tbo diseasa Ib 10 A little philosophy inctineth man's mind to atheism; tut akptn in philo-sophytiringeth E€o's minds about to religion.
to bawnoopinionof God* ^l,o;HKI tl ft weno b€ffier opinion as is nnworthy of him. 17.Of Suprstltlon of edrntioni_g tho etder, 12 Travel, in the younger sort, is a pert 18.Of Thad a part of experim. t3 It is a mis€rablestato of mind to havo f6ry thin8q to desireand 19.Of Enpire maoy rhin8Fto fear. t4 Nothine destroy€thauthoriW so much as the rmegual and tmtoo far, and'rela:red too timely fntercha;igeof lnwer prcssed Ib mtrc[.
15Tber€bothatcanpackthscard8,andy€tcannolpqy-rytt . 16Besotnroto thyaelf,asthouE ryt falso, ;*of -"y 23.Of Wstumfora Mofs StIf
26 17 He that will not apply new remediw must expectnew evils: for 24. Of Innovations time is the greatestinnorrator. 25.Of Dispatch 18 To choosetime is to savetime, 19 The French are wiser than they seem,ffid the Spaniardsseem 26. Of SeemingWise wiser than they are. or a g9d. 20 lYhosoeveris delightedin solitudeis eitherawild bea-s,t 27. Of Friendship 28.Of Expense 21 Richesarefor qpending. 30. Of Regimentof Health 22 Agewill not be defied. 23 Suspicionsarnongst thoughts aro like bats amongst birds, they ever fly by twilight. 31.Of Suspicion 24 Ot great riches there is no real use, except it be in the distri34. Of Riches bution. 25 Nature is often hidden, sometimes overcome, seldom extinguished. 38, Of Nature ln Men in may in hgurs, !f he lave bo 26 A man that is young years old v r ' r Iost no.time. 42. of roitn and.4ge 43, Of fuauty 27 Yirtue is like a rich stone,best plain set. 28 Honsesare built to live in, and not to look on 45. Of Building 29 God Almighty first planted a garden.And indeedi! is the purest of human pleasures. 46. Qf Gudens 30 Studiesseryofor delight, for otaament, and for ,ffyi "r*, Ib 31 To spendtoo much time in studiesis sloth. to books are be tasted, others swallowed, to be 32 Some and some Ib few to be chewedand digested. man; maketh a rnan; ready and full 33 Reading conferenooa Ib writing an exast rDrn. poets men mathematics Histories make wise; the subtile; 34 *itty; natural philosophy d*p; moral grir-tle;logic and rhetoric able to contend. Ib 35 Fameislike a river,thatbealeth up thingstightandswotn,ood drowns thinB$wei$bty and solid" 53. Of Pratse 36 The place ofjustico is an hallowed plaoo, 56, Of tradicature 37 If a man will begin with certainties,he shall end in doubts, but if he will bo conte,nt to begin with doubts, he shall end in ertainties. TTrbAdvancementof Learnitgt Ir 5r 8 38 Hope is a good breakfast, but it is a bad supper. -' Alnphthegnar36
n
Barham
39 r bave taken all knowledgo to be *y province. r.etter to Inrd Burleph, 1592 40 God's first creature,which was light. r'Ite NewAtrantts 4l rhere are four classesof rdols which beset meds rninds. To thesefor distinction saker have assignednames- calline the first class,Idols of the Tribe; the secoi'd,rdols of the cavej ttre third, rdols of the Market-place;the fourthr rdols of the Theatre. NovurnOrganwn -42 Nature, to be commanded,must be obeyed, Ib BAGEHOT, Walter, tS?Gt877 43 TheTimeshas mademany ministries, TIrcEnglishconsitution, Ch. T 44 women - onehalf ihe humanraceat least-carefifty times more ' for a marriagethan a ministry. Ib, Ch. 2 45 of all nations rn-tle wgrld, the Engtishare perhapsthe least a nation of pure philosophers. Ib 46 Poverty is an anomaly to rich people.rt is very difficult to make out why people who want dinner do not ring the bell. Aterary Studiesr2 BAIRNSFATIIER, Ctarles Bruce, 18S3-1959 47 Well, if you knows of a better 'ole, go to it.
Fmgmentsfrom Frencerl
BALFOUR, Arthur James, fi4H930 48 The energiesof oru swtem will decan the elory of the sunwill be dimmedr-andthe earih, tidelessandinert,?itfno longer tolerate thb race which has for a moment disturbed its solitude. Man will go dovm into the pit, and all his thoughts will perish. T'lteFotdatiow of klief, PArt I, Ch. I 49 ltis unfortr:nate, consideringthat enthusiasmmovesthe world, that so few enthusiastscan & trusted to speakthe tnrth. I*tter to Mrs Drew, 1918 BALIT, John, ?-1381 50 When Adam delved and Eve spto, TVhowas then the gentlemanf Textfor sermon* rt1y:; BARIIAM, Richard lilanir, 1738-1S45 51 A seniant'stoo often an impudent elf; -If it'g businessof consequ6nce, do it'yourself! Ihe Ingoldsby I*gendt, The IngoldsbyPenance,Moral
Bafim
a
52 The lackdaw sat on tho Cardinal's chahl T'le Ingoldsby Bishop and abbot, and prior werethetro. I*gends, I'he fackdaw of-Rheinit 53 Nevetr,f ween, Was a proudet see,n, Read of in books, 6r dreamt of in dreans, Ib Than the Cardinal Lord Archbishop of Rheimsl 54 He long liy€d the pride of that country side, Ib And at-Iast in thebdour of sancity di6il 55 He smiled and sai4 'Sq do€syour mother know that you aro out?' Ib, MlsdYentues at Margate MRINGGOULD' SabfoF' 183+Lo'{ 56 Now the day is over, Night is drawing -4t, Shadowsof the evening Y St€at acro$ tho skJr. 57 Onward Christian soldi6rs Marching as to war, With the-Crossof Jesn Goiqg on beforo.
BARI{[]II[, Phlms Taylor' 181F1s)l 58 There'sa suckerborn wery minuta
Nowtlp Day ls ow
Omvwd Chrt$m Soldlen
Attribfied
BARRIF{, Sir James nfirfrtertr tffi:l9tl 59 When the first baby lauehed for the first time, the laug[ broks into a thousand pieces6nd tleV all went *ipping about, and that was the tregiining of fairiesl PETERPAN?etir Pan, Act I 60 Every time a child says'I dodt believein fairies' thereis a little Ib faiqy-somewherethaf fa[s ddwn dead' PEIB, PAI\ 3 Act Ib, PAI{ 61 To dis will be an awfully big adventtge. PErER If.you 62 Do you believe in fairies? Say quick that you believo. Ib, Act 4 beli6ve,clap your handsI rsiR-pAI.I interested is most is whateverhe 63 One's religion -KATE F, Td ygys I Inok The Tlvelve'Pound Success. 64 You've forgotten the grandest moral attribute of a Scot$nanf which might damagehis career. Maggie, thlt he'll do iothing-WIwt E*ri Woman-Itrnws,Act 2 JorrNsrrAND
29
Beaumont
BARRINGTON, George, 1755-1810? 65 True patriots we; for be it understood, prologue.for \Meleft our country-for-our country's good. openingof Playhouse,Sydnby,i6 Jan. IT96 by cfimphny of convicts BATEMAIY, Edgar, 19th centrny 66 Wiv a ladderand someglasses, You could seeto'Ackndy Marshe.s, If it wasn't for the 'ousei in between.
If it wasn'tfor the 'Ousesin between
BATES, Katherine Lee, 1859-1929 67 America! America! God shedHis graceon thee And crown thy good with brotherhood From seato shining sea! Americathe Beautful BAYLY, firomas llalmes, nn-1839 68 Absencemakesthe heart grow fonder, Isle of Beauty,Fare thee well!
Isle of Beauty
BEAITY, David, lst Earl Beatty, leff-1936 69 There'ssomethingwrong with our bloody shipstodhy. Remark during Battle of Jutland, 1916 BEALJMONT, Ftancis, 1584-1616 70 What things we have seen, Done at the Mermaid! heard words that havebeen So nimble, and so full of subtleflame, As if that everyonefrom whencethey came Had meantto put his whole wit in a jest, And had resolvedto live a fool the rest Of his dull life. Letter to BenJonson 7l Mortality, beholdandfear! What a changeof flesh is here. On the Tombsin Westminster Abbey BEAUMONT, Francis, 1584-tr616,and FLBTCHER, John, 1579-1625 The Double 72 But what is past my help is past my care. Marriage, Act I, Scene I 73 There is no other purgatory but a woman. ELDERLovELEss The Scornful lady, Act 3, Scene I
Ee*ett
30
BECXETT,Samuel,190674 Nothing happens,nobody comes,nobody gocs, it's awftrll EsrRAcoN Watttttg for Gofut,Act I
75 uonan: That passedthe time. EsrRAcoN:It would have passedin any case. VIADTMTR: Yes, but not so rapidly. 76 Habit is a great deadener. vraD)rMrn BECXG'ORD, Willlam, 1759-t:8f4 77 I amnot over-fond of resisting temptation. BECOI{, Ttomas, lil}-lffil 78 For when the wino is in, the wit is out.
Yathck &techtsrnr 375
BEE, Bemsnl Eltloft, 1823-1t61 79 There is Jacksonstandinglike a stonewall. BEECIIING, Hmy Clsrh$ l$ttsf9l9 80 First come I; my name is Jowett. There's no knowledge but I know it. f am Master of this College: Wtrat I dodt know isn't kbowledge.
Ib, Act I Ib, Act 3
Flrst futth of Bull kt t, 186I
Tlu Muquc of fullbl
BERBOIIIU, Sh nfirx' tt7z-l9, 6 81 Most women are not so young as tbctt arc painte& e Defenceof Cosnutict 82 Zuleika. on a desert island, would barn spent most of her timo Zuleika Dobson,Ch, 2 in looking for a man's footprint. 83 She was one of the people who san 'I don't know anything Ib, Ch.9 about music really, but I know what I like.' BEERSI,Eftel Llmn, t.gn4gf, 84 All quiet along the Potomac tonight, No sound savethe msh of the river, lVhile soft falls thc dew on the face of the deadThe picket's off duty forever. All Quiet Along thc Potottuc BEHN, Aphrs, 164F1689 85 Love oeascsto be a pleanre, when it oeascsto be a socret. La'Montre, or Tlu Inver's Watch,Fottr o'clock 86 Variety is the goul of pleasuro. wu.r*lonB _Tlv^Qor, Part 2, Act I
3l
Belloc
87 Fine clothes, rich furniture, jewels and plate are more invitine than beauty unadorn'd. prrnoxs;a ilc Rover,part 4, Acti BELLOC, Hilaire, 1870-1953 88 Child! do not throw this book about; Refrain from the unholy pleasuro Of cutting all the pictures-dutt Preserveit as your chiefesttreasure,
TIp Bad Child's Book of Beasts,Dedicatton
89 When people call this beast to mind, lbey marvel more and more At sucha little tail behinq So large a trunk before. Ib,The Eleplmt S) The Chief Defect of Henry King Was chewinglittle bits of String. CautionaryTdes, Et-y Kirg 91 Phpicians of the Utmost Fame \ilere called at once; but when they came ftey answered,as they took their Fees, Ib "Thereis no Cure for this Disease.' 92 'Oh, my Friends, be warned by me, That Breakfast, Dinner, Lunch and Tea Are all the Htrman Frame requires. . . .' Ib With that the Wretched Child expires. 93 When I am dead, I hope it may be said: 'His sins were scarlet, but his Sookswers read.' Epigrams, On His Books 94 Lord Finchley tried to mend the Electric Light Himself. It stiruckhim dead: And servehim-rightt It is the businessof the wealthyman Ib, Lord Finchley To give emploSmentto the artisan. Privilege_ on stands power which accurs0d The 95 (And goeswith Women, and ChamPagqeand Bridge) Broke - and Democracyresumedher reign: (Which goeswith Bridge, and Women an? Ctan
Ib,on' tli"#?A,dion
96 The Devil, having nothing elseto do, Went off to tempt My Lady Poltagrue. My Lady, tempted by a private whim, I!, 9F Ul, him. ry I\,IAcBETH smell of the blood still. All the perfumes of Arabia 69 lfere's the 5, Ir 48 will not sweeten this little hand. LADv I\,IAcBETH bed, to bed; there's knocking the gate. Come, corne, come, at 70 To come, give me your hand. \4(hat's done cannot be undone. LADY MAcBETH 5, Ir 64
ShakesBearc
336
7l f have liv'd long enough.My way of life fs fall'n into the sear,the yellow leaf; And that which should accompanyold age, As honour, love, obedietr@,troops of friends, Macbeth,5, 3, 22 I must not look to have. MAcBErrr ?2 Canst thou not minister to a mind diseas'd, Pluck from the memory a rooted sorro% Raze out the written troubles of the brain, And with somesweetoblivious antidote Cleansethe shiff'd bosom of thai periloussftiff 5, 3r 40 Which weighsupon the heart? MAcBEnr 13 I will not be afraid of death and bans TiII Birnam Forest corneto Dunsinane. lvIAcBE'rE 5, 3r 59 74 Hang out our bannerson the outward walls; 5,5,I The qy is still 'They come'. I,IAcBETH 5, 5, 13 75 I have supp'd full with horrors. MActsETIT 76 Sheshould have died hereafter; There would have been a time for sucha word. Tomorrow, and tomorro% and tomorro% Creepsin tbis petty pacefromday to day To the last syllable of recordedtime, And all our lesterdayshave lighted fools The way to frustydeath. Outr 6ut, brief candlel Life's b'ut a walking shadow,a poor player, That stnrts and frefs his hour uPon the stage' And then is heard no more; it is a tale Told by ao idiot, full of sound and fbry' 5, 5, 17 Siguifying nothing. rvlAcsrfir 77 I gio to be awearyof the sun,and wish th' esta:teo' th' world werenow undone. Ring the alanrm bell. Blow wind, comewrack; At lEastwe'll die with harnesson our back, lvIAcBErIr5, 5r 49 I bear a charmed life, which must not yield 78 MAcBETH: To one of woman born.
'om,ff-#,f;ll'::Sfr'
Telt thee Macd-uffwas from his rnother'swomb 5, 8, 12 Untimely ripp'd. 5r 79 Live to be the show and gme o' th' time. I\,IAcDuFF 8, 24 T-ayotr, Macduff; 80 And damnndbe him that firstbries'Hold, enough!' IYIACB$IH 5r 8, 33
337
Shakespeare
Measurefor Measure 81 'Tis one thing to be tempted,Escalus, Another thing to fall, I not deny Thejgry, passingon the prisondr'slife, May in the sworn twelvehavea thief or two Guiltier than him they try. ANGELo 2, I, 17 82 some rise by sin, and someby virtue fall" EscALUs 2, 1r 38 83 This will last out a night in Russia, lVhen nights are longestthere. Al.rcnr.o 2, I, I2g 84 No cererygnythat to great oneslongs, Not the king's crown nor the deputedsword, The rnarshal'struncheonnor the judge'srobe, Becomethem with one half so gobd a grace As mercy does. TsABELLA 2, 2, 59 85 The law hath not beendead,though it hath slept. ANGELO 2, 2190 86 O, it is excellent To havea.giant's-strength!But it is tpannous To useit like a giant. TsABELLA 212, 107 87 But man, proud ffiaor Dress'din a littlb brief authority, Most ignorant of what he'smost assru'd, His glassyessence, like an angry spe, Playssuchfantastic tricks befbre high heaven As makesthe angelsweep. TsABELLA 2, 2, 117 88 That in the captain'sbut a choleric word Which in the soldier is flat blasphemy. rsABErrl\ 2, 2, 130 The miserable 89 haveno other medicine But only hope. cLA,uDro 3,1r2 but to die, and go we know not where; 90 Ay, To lie in cold obstruction,and to rot; This sensiblewarrn motion to become A kneadedclod; and the delightedspirit To bathein fiery floods or to reside In thrilling region of thick-ribbedice. cLAuDIo 3, I, llg 9I The weariestand most loathedworldly life That age,ache,penury,and imprisonment, Can lay on nature is a paradise To what rvefear of death. cLAUDIo 3, I, ffiA 92 Take, O, take thoselips away, That so sweetly'#ereforsworn;
Shakespare
338
And those eyes, the break of day, Lights that do mislead the morn; But my kissesbring again, bring ag?i1i Sealsof love, but seal'd in vain, seal'd in vain. SONCI Measure far Measure, 4, I, I
4, 3, 173 93 f am a kind of burr; I shall stick. Luclo 94 Hastestill payshaste,and leisureanswersleisure; Like doth quit like, and Mcasurestill for Measure.DUKE 5, Ir 4A8 95 tf/hat's mine is yours, and whai is yours is mir-re' DUKE 5, I, 535 Ihe Merchant of Venice 96 I hold the world but as the world, GratiaooA stage,whereeveryman must Play a partt 1, Ir 77 And mine a sad one. AI{ToNIo visages 97 Thereare a sort of men whose Do cream and mantle like a standingpond. GRATIANO I, I, 88 Orqclet Sir am say'f should who As 98 And when I ope riry lips let no dog bark'. GRATIANOI, Ir 93 99 In Belmont is a IadYrichlY left, And sheis fair and, fpiref than that word, I, I, 16I Of wondrous virtues. BASSAI\IIo this of aweary is body my little Nerissa, my troth, By t world.
PoRTIA
yffi
2If to do wereas easyas to know what weregood.tod?' 4upttt had been churchesr-and poor men's cottagesprinces'p_alaces. PoRTIA I. 2, II 3 How like a fawningpublicanhe lookst I hate him for he is a Christian; But more for that in low simPlicitY He lendsout moneygratis,and brtlgs.do"m The rate of usanceherewith us in Venice. If I can catch him onceupon the hip' I witl feed fat the ancientgrudgeI 6ear hirn. $TYLOCKIr 3, 36 4 The devil can cite Scripturefor his pu{pose. A!.lroMo I, 3r 93 ManY a time and oft 5 I, 3, I0I In the Rialto you haverated rne. ${YI.ocK 6 Still have I borne it with a patient shntg' For suff'rance is the badgebf aU our tribe; You catl me misbelieverr-cut-throatdog, Ir 3, 104 And spit upon my Jewishgaberdine. sf,rYrocK
339
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7 I like not fair terms and a villain's mind. BAssAMo The Merchant of Venice, I, 3, 174 8 It is a wise father that knows his own child. LALTNcELoT coBBo 2, 2, 69 9 There is some ill a-brewingtowards my rest, For I did dream of mone).bags tonight. sHyLocK 2, S, 17 1 0 But love is blind, and lovers cannot see The pretty follies that themselvescommit. JEssrcA 216, J6 l l The ancient saying is no heresy: Hanging and wiving goes by ciestiny. NERrssA 2,9, g2 l 2 Irt him look to his bond. sHyLocK 3, I, 39 l 3 Hath not a Jew eyes? Hath not a Jew hands,organs,dimensions, senses,affections,passions,fed with the same food, hurt with the same weaPons,subject to the same diseases,healed by the same means, warmed and cooled by the same wintef and sumrner, as a Christian is ? If you pribk us, do we not bleed? { y:q tig\le us, do we not taugh? If you poison us, do we not die? And if you wrong us, shall we nirt revenge? $rn ocK 3, I, 49 14 Tell me where is fancy bred, Or in the heart or in the head, How begot, how nourished ? soNG 3, 2, 63 15 lhq quality of mercy is not strain'd; It droppeth as the gbntle rain from heaven Upon the place beneath.It is twice blest: It blessethhim that gives and him that takes. Tir mightiest in the rnightiest; it becomes The throned monarch better than his crown; Sit Fceptreshows the force of temporal power, The attribute to awe and majesty, 'Wherein doth sit the dread and iear of kings; But mercy is above this sceptred sway, It is enthroned in the hearti of kings, It is an attribute to God himself; And earthly power doth then show likest God's When mercy seasonsjustice. Therefore, JeW Though justice be tht plea, consider this That in the course of iustice none of us Should seesalvation;-we do pray for mera!, And that same prayer doth teach us all toiender The deedsof mercy. poRTrA 4, I, I7g
16 Wrest oncethe law to your authority; To do a great right do-a little wrong. EASsAhrro
4, I, 210
Shakespeare Yea, a Dqniell slfrlocK 17 A Daniel cometo judgment! v The Merclnnt of Venicer4, I, 218 4, I, 257 18 'Tis not in the bond. sHYIocK 19 A pound of that same merchant's flesh is thine. fG court awards it and the law doth give it. FoRTIA
4, I, 294 the take do you when my house 20 You take PloP That doth sirstainmy houiei /ou take my life When you do take the meanswherebyI live. stm,ocK 4, I, 370 4, 1,410 2l He is well paid that is well satisfied. PoRTIA 22 How sweetthe moonlightsleepsupon this bank! Here will we sit and lel the soundsof rnusic Creepin our ears;soft stillnessand the night Becomethe touchesof sweetharmony. Sit, Jessica.Look how the floor of heaven Is thick inlaid with patinesof bright gold; There's not the smailestorb which thbu behold'st But in his motion like an angelsings, Still quiring to the Y.o,rng-tl'.dcherubins; Suchharmony is in immortal souls, But whilst this muddy vestureof decay Doth grosslycloseit-in, we cannothebr it" LoRENZO5, In 54 23 I am nevermerry when I hear sweetmusic. JEssIcA 5, Ir 69 24 The man that hath no music in himself' Nor is not movndwith concord of sweetsounds, Is fit for treasons,stratagetrs,and spoils. LoRENZO 5, Ir83 25 How far that little candlethrows his beamsl So shinesa good deedin a naughtyworld, PoRTIA 5, Ir90 26 For a light wife dotli make a heavyhusband. PoRTIA 5, I, 130 Ihe Merry lVives of Windsor I, I, I 27 I wilt make a Star Chambermatter of it. sI{ALLow of Songg my Book had q$ I shillings forty than 28 I had rather I, I, 179 Sonnetshere. sLENDER 29 Here will be an otd abusing of God's patienceand the $i"g': l, 4, 5 English, MIsrREss QTTIcKLY oyster, mine the worl9's then 30 Why, 2, 2,4 Wtriitr I with sword will open. PIsroL 31 I cannot telt what the dickenshis nameis. MRsPAoE 3r 2, 15
yl
Shrkespeare
32 O, what a world of vile ill-favour'd faults Looks handsomein three hundredpoundsa yearl arvnnpAcB TheMerry Wivesof Windsor,3,4, 32 33 f'flllno pullet-spermin my brewage. rArsrAFF 3, 5, 27 34 They say there is divinity in odd numbers,either in nativity, chance,or death. FATsTAFF 5, Ir J A ffiidsrrmmeiNightts Dream 35 To live a barrensisterall your life, Chantingfaint hymns to the cold firritlessmoon. THEsEUS I, 1r 72 For aught that I could everread, 36 Could everhear by tale or history, The coruseof true love neverdid run smooth, LySANDER I, I,132 37 O helli to chooselove by another'seyes, HERMIA I, I, 140 38 Love looks not with the eyes,but with the mind; And thereforeis wing'd C\rpid painted blind. TTELENA, , I, 2.,4 39 'The most Lamentable Cornedy and most Cruel Death of Plrramusand Thisby.' eurNcn I, 2, I0 to tear cat A part in, make a to split, 1,2r 24 40 BorroM all I, 2, 59 4l f am slow of study. sNUo 42 Over hill, over dale, Thorough bush,thorough brier, Over park, over pale, 2, I, 2 Thorough flood, thorough fire. FAIRv met by moonlight, proud 2, 1,60 Titania. oBERoN 13 Ill 44 SinceonceI sat upon a promontory And hearda mermaidon a dolphin'sback Uttering suchdulcet and hannoniousbreath That the rude seagrew civil at her soDgr And certain starsshot rnadly from their spheres 2, I, 149 To hear the sea-maid'smusic. oBERoN 45 I'll put a girdle round about the earth 2, I, 175 In forty minutes. PucK 46 I know a bank whereonthe wild thyme blows, \4{hereoxlips and the noddingviolet grows, Quite over-canopiedwith lusciouswoodbine, With sweetmusk-roses,and with eglantine, onm.oN2, 1r 249 47 A lion amongladiesis a most dread.fulthing; for thereis not a sore fearful wild-fowl than your lion living.- BorroM 3, I, 27
Shakespeare
342
48 A calendar, a calendar! Look in the almanack; find out filoorshine, find out moonshine. BorroM A Midsummer Night's Dream, 3, Ir 46 49 Bless thee, Bottom, bless thee! Thou art translated. eurNcn
3, I, IA9 3, 2, 115 50 Lord, what fools thesemortalsbe! rucr 51 f havea reasonablegood ear in music.Let's havethe tongsand 4, I, 26 the bones. BoTToM the poet, the lover, and 52 The lunatic, 5, Ir 7 Are of imagination all compact. THEsEtts 53 The poet's eye,in a fine ftenzyroiling, Dotli glancafrom heavento earth,frbm earth to heaven; And as imaginationbodiesforth The forms of things unknown,the poet'sPen TLrns them to shapes,and givesto airy nothing 5, I, 12 A local habitation and a name. fimsgus 5, I, 57 54 Very tragical mirth. fiIEsE'tts 55 The iron tongueof midnight hath told twelve. 5, 1r 352 Lovers, to bed; 'tis alnaostfaurytfune. Tr{EsEus Much Ado About Nothing 56 A victory is twice itself when the achieverbrings home full 1, Ir 7 numbers. LEoNATo 57 IIe v/earshis faith but as the fashion of his hat. t*T3 , 62 f wonder that you will still be talking, Signior Bene58 BEATRTcE: dick; nobodymarksyou. BENEDTcK: What, my d'earL"di Disdain! Are you yet living? I, Ir 99 59 \Mouldyou haveme speakafter my custom,asbeinga professed I, I, 144 tyrant to their sex ? BENEDIcK 7,1r 232 60 Benedick the married man. BENEDIcK 61 What need the bridge much broader than the flood? DON PEDRO
I, I, 279
62 Friendship is constantin all other things 2, 1, 154 Savein the office and affairs of love. cLAUDro BENEDI"*r, 63 Shespeaksponiards,and everyword stabs. 1r 220 h?pPy little but 64 Silenceis the perfectestherald ofjoy: I were ttl 2, I, 275 could sayhow rnuch. cLAUDIo
343
Shakespeare
65 DoN PEDRo:Will yoU have ffio, Iady? BEATRIcE: No, my lord, unless I might have another for workTg-days; your_Grace is toc costly to wear every duy. Muclt Adtt About Nothing, Z, I, ZgJ 66 I was born to speak all mirth and no rnatter" BEATRTcB
2, I, 297 67 Therewasa star dans'd,and under that wasI born.
BEATRTCB
2, Ir 3A2 68 Sighno more,Iadies,sighno more, Men weredeceiversever, Onefoot in seaand one on shore, To one thing constantnever. BALTITAsAR 2, 3, 57 69 Doth not the appetitealter? A man lovesthe meat in his youth that he cannotendurein his age. BENEDTcK 213, 215 70 The world mustbe peopled"\MhenI saidI would die a bachelor I did not think I shouldlive till I weremarried, BENEilcK 213, 219" 7r Disdain and scornride sparkling in her eyes. HERo J, l, sI 72 Are you good men and true? DocBERRy 3, 3, I 73 To be a well-favouredman is the gift of fortune; but to write and read comesby nature. DocBERRy 3, 3, 13 74 You are thought here to be the most senseless and fit rnan for the constable of the watch. DocBERRy 3, 3, 19 ?5 For the watch to babble and to talk is most tolerable and not to be endured. DocDERRy 3, 3, 32 76 I thank God I am as honest as any man tiving that is an otrd man and no honesterthan f. vERGEs 3o5, 13 77 Comparisonsare odorous. DocBERRy 3, 5, 16 78 A ggo$ old man, sn, he will be talking; as they say '\4&en the ageis in the wit is out'. DocBERRy 3, 5, 32 79 Cur watch, sir, have indeed comprehendedtwo aspiciouspersons. DocBERRy 3, 5r 42 B0 Onwhat rnendaredo! What men may dol What men daily do, not knowing what they dol cLAUDro 4, t, I8 81 For it so falls out That what we havewe prize not to the worth Whileswe enjoy it, but beinglack'd and lost, Why, then we rack the value, then we find The virhre that possessionwould not show us Whiles it was ours. rnrARrRANcur 4, I, 217
Shakespeare 82 Write down that they hope they serveGod; and write God first; for God defend but God should go before such villains ! DocBERRy Much Ado About Nothing, 4, 2, 17 4, 2,46 83 Flat burglary as ever was committed. DocBERRy 84 O villain ! thou wilt be condernn'd into everlasting redemption 4, 2, 52 for this. DocBERRY 85 O that he were here to write me down an ass! pocBERRy 4, 2r 70 86 For there was never yet philosopher That coulcl endure the toothache patiently. LEoNATo 5, Ir 35 87 They have committed false report; moreoverr they have spoken untruths; secondarily, they are slanders; sixth and lastly, they have belied a lady; thirdty, they have verified unjust things; and to conclude, they are lyiog knaves. DocBERRY 5, I, 204 5r3rs 88 Done to death by slanderous tongues. cLAUDIo Otbello 89 But I will wear my heart upon my sleeve For daws to peck at. reco
I, I, 65 Rude am I in my speech, And little blest with the soft phraseof peace; For sincetheseanns of mine had sevenyears' pith, Till now somenine moons wasted,they haveus'd I, 3' 8I Their dearestaction in the tentedfield. orHELLo 91 I will a round unvarnish'd tale deliver I, 3190 Of my whole courseof love. orHEI.ro My story being done, 92 Shegaveme for my pains a world of sighs; Sheswore,in faittl, twas strange,'twas passingstrangel 'Twas pitifut, 'twas wondrouspitiful. ShewiSh'dshehad not heard it: vet shewish'd That heavenhad madeher such-i man. Shethank'd me; And badeffie, if I had a friend that lov'd her, I shouldbut teachhirn how to tell my story, And that would woo her. Upon this hint I spake; Shelov'd me for the dangersI had pass'd; And I lov'd her that shedid pity them. I, 3, 158 This only is the witchcraft I fiaveus'd. orHELLo gone and is past 93 To mourn a mischiefthat I, 3, 204 Is the next way to draw newinischief on. DUKE 94 The robb'd that snnilesstealssomethingfrom the thief' DUIcn I, 3, 208 90
34s
Shrkespeare
95 Look to her, Moor, if thou hasteyesto see: Shehas deceiv'dher father, and may thee. ERABANTTo Othello, I, 3, 292 96 Put moneyin thy purse, laco I, 3, 338 97 For I am nothingif not critical. r,l.co 2, I, 119 98 To sucklefools and chroniclesmall beer. raco 2, I, 159 99 But men are men; the bestsometimesforget, rll@ 2, 3, 233 I Reputation,reputation,reputationt O, I havelost my reputationl I havelost the immortal part of myseld,and what remains is bestial. cAssro 2, 3, 254 2 Good wine is a good familiar creatureif it be well us'd. r,l'co
2, 3, 299 3 How poor are they that havenot patience! What wound did everheal but by degrees? rlco 213r 35g 4 Therebyhangsa tail. crowN 3,1r8 5 Excellentwretch! Perditioncatchmy soul But I do love thee; and whenI love thee not Chaosis comeagain. orHELLo 3, Sr gI 6 Good namein man and woman,dearmy lord, Is the irnmediatejewel of their souls: Who stealsmy pursestealstrash; 'tis something,nothing; oTlvasmine, 'tis his, aod hasbeenslaveto thousands; But he that filchesfrom me my good nance Robs rnEof that which not enricheshirn And makesme poor indeed. rlco 3r 3, 159 jealousli ffiI 0, beware, lord, of 7 It is the green€y'd monster which doth mock 3r 3, tr69 The meat it feedson, rlco O curseof marriage, 8 That we can call thesedelicatecreaturesours, And not their appetites!I had rather be a toad And live upon the vapour of a dungeon, Than keep a corner in the thing I love 3, 3, 272 For others'uses" orHEtLo I He that is robb'd, not wanting what is stol'nr I-ethim not know't, and he'snot robb'd at all. cvrtlnr'rrl 3' 3' 346 o, now for ever lo Farewellthe tranquil mindt farewell content! Farewellthe ptumedtroops, and the big wars That make ambition virtuet 0, farewelll Farewell the neighing steedand the shrill trump' The spirit-stirring dnlm, th' ear-piercingfife,
346 The royal banner,and all quality, Pride, pomp, and circumstance,of gloriouswar! ortrrt.l,o Othello,3, 3, 351 11 Th.y are not everjealousfor the cause, 3, 4, 16I But jealousfor they arejealous. EMILIA 12 But yet the pity of it, Iago! O, Iago, the Pity of it, Iago! oTHELLO4, I, 191 me to make alas, But, 13 The fixed figure for the time of scorn 41 21 54 To poini his siow unmovingfinger at. orHELLo O thou weed 14 Who are so lovely fair and smell'stso sweet That the senseachesat theet 41 2, 67 \Moutdthou had'st neverbeenborn! orspno 4, 3, 57 15,'Tis neither herenor there. EMILTA If Cassiodo remain, T6 He hath a ciaily beautyin his life 5, I, 18 That makes Ine ugly. rAGo night the is This 17 5, I, 128 That either makesme or fordoesme quite. rllco 18 It is the cause,it is the cause,my soulI-et me not nameit to You,you chastestars5r2,I It is the cause. orHELLo 19 Put out the tight, anCthen Put out-thelight. If I quenchtliee, thou {*ryi"g minister, I can again thy fornnerlight restore' shouldi repentme; but 6nce pgt out thy light, Thou cunnibg'stpatter.nof excelliognature, I know not whereis that Prometheanheat That can thy light relume. When I havepluck'd thy rose' 5, 217 I cannot give iivitat growth again. orrtErlo 20 Not Cassiokill'd ! Then murder'sout of tune, 5, 2, I18 And sweetrevengegrows harsh. oTHELLO journey'send, here is my-butt, 2l Here is my -sea-mark 5r 2r 270 of my utmost sail. oTIIELLO And very 22 Soft you; a word or two beforeyou 99. . I have done the statesomeservi6e,and they know't No more of that. I pray lou, in your letters, 'When you shall theseulucky deedsrelate, Speakof me as I am; nothing extenuate, Nor set dounraught in malid. Then mus-tyou speak Of one that lov'd-not wisely, but too well;
347
Shakespeare
Of one not easilyjealous,but, beingwrought, Perplexedin the extreme;of one whosehand, tike the baseIndian, threw a Pearl away Richerthan all his tribe; of one whosesubdu,'deyes, Albeit unusedto-the rneltingmood, Drop tears as fast as the Arabian trees Their med'cinablegum. Setyou downthis: And say -abesidesthat in Aleppo once, Where malignant and a turban'd Trrrk Beat a Venetianand traduc'd the staten I took by th' throat the circurnciseddo& Othello,5, 2, 341 And sm6tehim - thus. orHELLo 23 I kiss'd theeere I kill'd thee.No way but this 5, 2, 361 Killing my self, to die upon a kiss. orlrnr.to Pericles 24 Seewhereshecomes,apparell'd like the sPring. PERIcIES 1, I, 12 25 Few love to hear the sinsthey love to act. PERIcLEs I, I, 92 26 Kings are earth's gods; in vice their law's their will. PERIcIES I, I, Io3 in the $ea, fishes live how the Master, f rnarvel n 3p FTsHERMAN: Why, BSmen do a-land - the Spsatoneseal qP lsr FIsHERMAN: 2, I, 27 theiittle ones. King Richartl the Second n 28 Old John of Gaunt, time-honoured l^ancaster" RIcITARD I, I, I" 29 trefs purge this choler without letting blood. RICIIARD II 1, I, 153 times afford mortal 30 The puresttreasure Is spbtlessreputation; -gnAed that rwaft loam or paihtedclay, Mei arebut A jewel in a tbn-timesbarr'd-uPchest Is b bold spirit in a toyal breasi. Mine honour is my life; both grow in 9ne; Take honour from ffio, and my life is done. MOWBRAY I, I, 177 II RTCHARD 31 We werenot born to sue,but to command' I, I, 196 which in mean men we entitle patience 32 TTrrat Is pale cold cowardicein noble breasts. OF CLOUCESITER I, 2, 33 DLTCHESS
Shakeileare
348
lfris must mY comfort be here shall shine on me" you That sun that wanns Riclnrd the Second,Ir 3, 144 BSLINGBR9KE 34 How lons a time lies in onelittle wordl Four lagfing winters and four ryntgllPrings End in ;-wciiA: suchis the breath of Kings. BoLINGBRoKE 3' 213 35 Things sweetto tasteprove in digestionsour' "^rr*'' I, 3, 236 36 AII placesthat the eye of heavenvisits Are^to a wise man ports and haPPyhavens. Teachthv ne@ssitYtoreasonthus: I, 3, 275 There is Lo virtueiite necessity. GAUNT hand his in 37 O, who can hold a fire ? By thinking on the frostY Caucasus Oi cloy tfrihungry edgco{ aPPetite Bv baie imaeinitibn oTa fea5t? d waflow nEked in Decenber snow ny it;"ting on fantastic summer'sheat? O', nol theiPPrehension of the gjod Gives but thQ-gpeaterfeeling to the worse. BOLINGBROKE 33
I, 3, 295
38 Pray God we may make haste,and cometoo latel u Ir 4, 64 RrcrrARD 39 More are meds endsmark'd than their lives before. The settine sun, and music at the close, As the lasitaste of sweets,is sweetestlast, Wit in remembran@more than things lost past' GAut'IT 2, 1, II N Methinks I am a ProPhetnqy Tilir'd, And thus expirinf do foretell of him: His rash fierce bl6zeof riot cannot last, For violent fires soon burn out themselves; Small showerslast long, but suddenstormsaxeshort; He tires-betimesthat s[urs too fast betimes. GAUNT 2, L, 3I 4I This royal throne of kings, this sceptredisle' This ealttr of majest|, ttiis s9?tof Mars, This other Eden, demi-Paradise, This fortress built bv Nature for herself Against infection anc the hand of war, fffis h*ppy breed of men, 1'6i*little world, This preiibus stogeset in tho silver sea' lyhiefu selryesit in the office of a wall,
Shskespeare Or as a moat defensiveto a house, Againstthe envyof lesshappierlandsi . ffiis blessedplot, this eartli,-thisrealm,this England, This nurse,this teemingwomb of royal kings, Fear'd by their breed,and famous!y lhtir birth. cAUI\rr I{ichard the Second,2, I, 40 42 England,bound in with the triumphant sea' Wh-oserocky shorebeatsback the envioussiege Of wat'ry Nbptune,is now bound in with shame, With inky blots and rotten parchmentbonds; That England,that was wont to conqug{others, Hath made a shamefulconquestof itself. Ah, would the scandalvani5hwith my life, 2, Ir 6I How happy then weremy ensuingdehth! cltnrr tr 43 Can sick men play so nicely with their names? RIcHARD 2, Ir 84 M I count myselfin nothing elseso happy As in a soul rememb'ringmy good friends. BOLINGBROKB 2, 3r 46 2, 3r 87 45 Graceme no gtace,nor uncle me no uncle. YoRK 46 The caterpillarsof the commonwealth. BoLINcBRoKB 2, 3, 166 47 Things past redress are now with me Past care. 4S 49
50
51 52 53
YoRK 2, 3, 171 3, I, 2I BoLINGBRoKE banishment. of bread bitter the Eating joy for f weep To stand upon my kingdom once again, Dear earth, I do salute thee with my hand, Though rebels wound thee with their horses' hoofs. RrcrrARDu 3, 2r 4 Not all the water in the rough rude sea Can wash the balm from an anointed king; The breath of worldly men cannot depose 3,2, 54 The deputy elected by the Lord. rucnanp n O, call back yesterday, bid time return. sALISBURY 3, 2, 69 Cry woe, destruction, ntin, and decay The worst is death, and death will have his day. RIcrTARDu 3, 2, 102 Of comfort no man speak. Let's talk of graves,of woffns, and epitaphs; Make dust our paper, and with rainy eyes Write sorrow on the bosom of the earth. Irt's choose executors and talk of wills. RIcHARDrI 3, 2, 144
350 54 For God's sake let us sit upon the ground And tell sad stories of the death of kings: How some have been depos'd, some slain in war, Some haunted by the ghosts they have depos'd, Some poison'd by their wives, some sleepingkill'd, All murder'd - for within the hollow crown That rounds the mortal temples of a king Keeps Death his court; and there the antic sits, Scoffing his state and grinning at his pornp; Allowine him a breath, a little scene, To monarchize, be fear'd, and kill with looks; Infusing him with self and vain conceit, As if this flesh which walls about our life Were brass impregnable; and, humour'd thus, Comes at the last, and with a little pin Bores through his castle wall, and farewell,,king! nrcnann n Riclwrd tlrc Second,3, 2, 155
55 What must the King do now? Must he submit? The King shall do i[. Must he be depos'd? The Kirrg shall be contented.Must he lose The namb of king? A God's name,let it go. IllI give my jewelsfor a set of beads, My gorgeouspalacefor a herrnitage, My gay apparelfor an almsman'sgown, My figur'd gobletsfor a dish of wood,_ My sceptre1'ora paLmer'swalking staq My subjectsfor apair of carvedsaints, And my large kingdom for a little grave, II A little little grave,an obssuregrave. RIcHARD 56 And if you crown him, let me prophesyThe bldod of Englishshall manurethe ground And future agesgroan for this foul act; Peaceshall go sleepwith Ttrrks and infidels. cARLTSLE 4, I, 136 57 Did they not sometimecry'All hail!' to me? So Judasdid to Christ; but he, in twelve, Found tnrth in all but one; I, in tlvelvethousaod,none, God savethe King! Will no man sayamen? Am I both priest and clerk? Well then, €Lmen,RICHARD U 4, I, 169 58 I give this heavyweight from off my head, And this unwieldysceptrefrom my hand, The pride of kingly swayfrom out my heart;
3s1
Shakespeare
With mine own tearsI washawaymy balm, Il With mine own handsI give awaylnl crgw.n. RIcHARD Richard the Second,4, I, 204 59 The woe'sto come;the childrenyet unborn Shall feel this duy as sha{pto them as thorn. CARLISLE
4, I, 322
60 I am swornbrother, sweet, To grim Necessity;and he and I Will keep a league till death. RIcHARDrI 61 As in a theatre the eyesof men After a well-gracodactor leaves the stage Are idly bent on him that enters next, Thinking his prattle to be tedious. yoRK 62 I have been studying how I may compare This prison where I live unto the world. RIcITARDu How sour sweet music is 63 When time is broke and no proportion kept! So is it in the music of men's lives. RIcgARD II
King Richard the Third 64 Now is the winter of our discontent Made glorious summerby this sun of York.
5, 1, 19
5, 2, 23 5,5,I 5, 5r 42
GTOUCESTER
1, I, 7
65 Our stern alarumschang'dto merry meetings, Our dreadful marchesto delightful measures. GLOUCESTER I, Ir7 66 Deform'd, unfinish'd,sentbeforemy time Into this breathingworld scarcehalf madoupr And that so lamelyand unfashionable That dogsbark at me as I halt by them. cLoUcEsrERI, 1, 20 1, I, 24 67 In this weakpiping time of peace. ct,oucEsrER I, 1, 30 68 f am deterrninedto prove a villain. cr.oucEsrER 69 Was everwomAnin this humour woo'd? Was everwomanin this humour won? cr.,oucEsrrR I, 2, 227 70 And thus I clothe my nakedvillainy With odd old endssiol'n forth of lioly writ, And seema saint when most I play the devil. GLOUCESTER t- 3^336 7l ' O,I havepass'da rniserablenight, So full of fearful dreams,of ugly sights, That, as I am a Christian faithful rniulr -,
r,
Shakespeare
3s2
f would not spendanother sucha night 'tweri: to buy a world of h.ppy daysThough So fuii of dismal terior was the tirnd!' " cr,anrNcs Riclnrd the T'hlrd,Ir 4, 2 72 O Lord, methoughtwhat pain it wasto drown, What dreadfulnoiseof watersin my ears, lVhat sightsof ugly death within my eyesl Methought f saw a thousandfearful wrecks, A thousandmen that fishesgRaw'dupon, Wedgesof gold, great anehors,heapsof pear!, Inestimablestones,unvaluedjewels, All scatt'redin the bottom of the sea; Somelay in deadmen'sskulls, and in the holes Where eyesdid onceinhabit there werecrept, As 'twer-ein scorn of eyes,reflectinggems, That woo'd the slimy bottom of the tb"p And mock'd the dead bonesthat lay scatt'redby. cr.ARENcB Ir 4, 2I 73 So wise so young, they say, do neverlive long. GIOUCESTER
3, I, 79 74 My lord of Ely, when I was last in Holborn I saw good strawberriesin your gardenther€.
GI.oUCESTER
3, 4, 32 75 Talk'st thou to me of ifs? Thou art a traitor. Off with his head! cl.oucgsrgR 3, 41 77 76 High-reaching Buckingham grows circumspect. RICHARDItr
4, 2, 3I 77
But I am in So far in blood that sin will pluck on sin, RrcrrARD In 4, 21 65
78 [ am not in the giving vein today. RrcrrARD Itr 79 Their lips were four red roseson a stalk, And in their summerbeauty kiss'd eachother.
4, 2, 120 TYRREL
4, 3, 12 80 An honesttale speedsbest being plainly told. QUEENEIJIZABEffiI
4, 4, 358
8l Ha{p not on that string. RTcHARD m 414, 364 82 Is the chair empty? Is the sword unsway'd? Is the King dead,the empire unpossess'd ? RTCHARDItr 470 83 True hope is swift and flies with swallow'swings; Kings it makesgods, and meanercreatureskirtgs. RTcHMoND 5, 2, 23
353
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m 84 The King's nameis a tower of strength.- RIcITARD Richard the Third, 5, 3, 12 85 I havenot that alacrity of spirit rtr Nor cheerof mind that f waswont to have. RrcrrARD 5, 3, 73 hath a thousandseveraltongues, 86 My conscience And everytonguebrings in a severaltale, And everytale condemnsme for a villain. RICI{ARD In 5, 3, 193 87 A horse!a horse!*y kingdomfor a horse! RICHARD Itr 5,417
Romeo and Jutiet Prologuer6 88 A pair of star-cross'dlovers. cHoRUs Ib, 12 89 The two hours' traffic of our stage. crIoRUs gold. RoMEo I, 1, 213 90 Saint-seducing 9I For I am proverb'dwith a grandsirephrase; I, 4, 37 I'll be a candle-holderand look on. RoMEo 92 O, then f seeQueenMab hath beenwith you. Sheis the fairies' widwtr, ffid shecomes In shapeno biggerthan an agatestone On the fore-fingerof an alderm&o, Drawn with a team of little atomies Athwart men'snosesas they lie asleep. MuRcurro I, 4, 53 93 For you and I are past our dancingdays. cAputsr I, 5, 29 94 O, shedoth teachthe torchesto burn bright ! It seemsshehangsupon the cheekof night As a rich jewel in an Ethiop's ear Beautytob rich for use,for earth too dear! nolwno I, 51 42 Ir 5151 95 For I ne'er saw true beauty till this night. RoMEo 1r 5, 136 96 My only love sprung from my only hate! nrrrnr 97 He jests at scarsthat never felt a wound. But, soft ! What light through yonder window breaks? 212,I It is the east, and Juliet is the sun. RoMEo her I her hand cheek upon 98 Seehow she leans O that f were a glove upon that hand, 2, 2, 23 That I might touch that cheek! noueo 99 O Romeo, Romeo ! wherefore art thou Romeo ? JULIET 2, 2, 33 I What's in a name? That which we call a rose 2, 21 43 By any other name would smell as sweet. JULIET
ShakesBeare
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2 0, swearnot by the moon, th' inconstantmoon, That monthly changesin her cirsled orb, Irst that thy love prove likewise variable. JULTET Romeoand Juliet, 212, 109 3 lfris bud of love, by summer'sripeningbreath, May prove a beauteousflow'r when next we meeL fiTtET 2' I2I 4l-or,, goestoward love as school-boysfrom their or.u:; But love from love, toward school with heavylooks. RoMEo 2' 2' 156 soundlovers' tonguesby night, 5 How silver-sw'eet 2, 2, 166 Like softestmusic to attendingears! nor"so 6 Good night, good nightl Parting is suchsweetsorrow That I shall saygoodnight till if be morro\ry. JUUEr 2,2, 185 7 Wisely and slow; they stumble that run fast. rRIARLAwRENcB 2, 3194 21 4, 37 8 O flesh, flesh, how art thou fishifiedl MnRcurro 21 4, 56 9 I am the very pink of courtesy. MERcurro 10 Thereforelove moderately:long love doth so; Too swift arrives as tardy as too slow. rRIARLAwRENcE 216, 14 11 A plagueo' both your housest 3, tr, 103 fGy f,avemade liorms'meat of me, MrRcttuo 3, I, 133 12 Or I am fortune's foolt Rolmo Come, civil night, 13 3,2, I0 Thou sober-suitedmatron, all in black Jtrtltr jocund day out, and are burnt candles 14 Night's 3, 5r g Standstiptoe on the misty mountain tops. RoMEO 15 Thank me no thankings,nor proud me no prouds. cAPULET 3, 5, 152 oTis an ill cook that cannot lick his own fingers" SERvINGIvIAN 16 4,216 Beautyosensignyet 17 Is crimson in thy lips and in thy cheeks, And death'spa16flig is not advancedthere. RoMBo 5, 3,94 18
O, here Will f set up my everlastingrest, And shakethe yoke of inauspiciousstars From this world-weariedflesh. Eyes,look your last, 5r 3, 109 Arms, take your last embrace. noMeo
355
ShakesBearc
The Taming of the Shrew 19 Look in the chronicles: we came in with Richard Conqueror, crrRrs'ToPHER sr.y Induction, I, 4 20 No profit grows where is no pleasure ta'en; In brief, sir, study what you most affect. TRAMo I, I, 39 rotten I, 131 There's small choice in apples. rroRTENsro I, 2I 22 Kiss ffio, Kate. PETRUcHIo 2, I, 316 23 Thereby hangs a tale. cRUMIo 4, Ir 50 24 This is a way to kill a wife with kindness. PEtRucHIo 4, I, 192 25 Our purses shall be proud, our gtlrments poor; For 'tis the mind that makes the body rich; And as the sun breaks through the darkest clouds, So honour peereth in the meanest habit. pETRUcHIo 413, 167 26 A woman rnov'd is like a fountain troubled Muddy, ill-seemiog, thick, bereft of beau$r. I(ATHERINA
5, 2, 142 The Tempest 27 He hath no droumingmark upon him; his complexion is perfect 1, Ir 28 gallows. coNzArp 28 The wills abovebe done,but I would fain die a dry death. coNzALo I, Ir 63 else TVhatseestthou In the dark backward and abysm of time? PRosPERoI, 2, 49 I, 2, IA6 30 Your tale, sir, would cure deafness. MIRAI{DA
31
My library
Was dukedom large enough. PRosiPERo 32 From the still-vex'd Bermoothes. ARIEL 33 You taught me language, and my pqofit on't fs, I know how to Cursb.The red plague rid you For learning me your language! cALiilAI.I 34 Come unto these yellow sands, And then take hands. ARIEL 35 Full fathom five thy father lies; Of his bones are coral made; Those are pearls that were his eyes; Nothing of him that doth fade But doth suffer a sea-change Into something rich and strange. ARIEL
I, 2, Iog I, 2, 229 I, 2, 363 I, 2, 375
I, 2, 396
shnkcryeare
356
This swift business f must uneasymake, lest too light winning Make the Vire light. pnospERo Tlre Tempest,I, 21 450 37 He rcceivescomfort like cold porridge. sEBAsrrAN 2, I, I0 38 I' th' commonwealthI would by contraries Executeall things. coNzAro 2, I, I4I 39 TVhileyou here do snoring lio, Open-eY'd conspiraw '. 2, I, 291 Hii time ootn tike. ARrEL 40 \ilhen they will not give a doit to relievea lame btggt", thry will 2, 2, 29 Iay out ten to seea dead Indian. TRINctu) 4l Ulseq acquaintsa man with strangebedfellows. IRINCT'I3 2, 2138 (Drtnks) srrprrANo 2, 2143 42 \lVell, herds ny comfort, 43 The master, the swabber,the boatswain, and I, The gunner, and his mate, I,ofai Mall, Me& and Marian, and Margery, 2, 2144 But none of us car'd for Kate. srEpEANo 'Ban'Ban, -Caliban, Ca 4 2, 2, 173 Has a new master''- Get a new mall. cALTBAI{ three of them; are this fule: we but five upAn there's say They 45 if th' other two be brain'd likg us, the state totters. rRlNcur.o 3,214 3r 2, 126 46 He that dies pays all debts. STEPEANo 4;l W not afeard. The isle is fuil of noises, Sounds,and sweet&irs,that give delight, and hurt not" CAI.IBAI{ 36
3r 2, 130
Travellers ne'er did lie, 'em. Arvroxto Ihoug[ fools at homo condemn You foolsl I and my fellows 49 Ar€ ministers of Fate; the elements Of whom Your swordsare temper'd may as well Wound thA loud winds, or witfi bemocli'd-at stabs KiU the still-closing waters,8s diminisfo One dowle that's in my plume. ARIEL 50 Our revels now are ended.Theseour actoru, As I foretold you, weneall spirits, and Are melted into air, into thin airl And, like the baselessfabric of this vision, The cloud-capp'd towers, the gorgeousp-alacest The solennnlemples, the great gtobe itselfi' Yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolve, I
3, 3126
3, 3r 60
3s7
Shakeryerro
And, like this insubstantialpageantfaded, I-eavenot a rack behind. We are suchstuff As dreamsare madeon; and our little life Is rounded with a sleep. PRosPERo The Tempest,4, I, 148 51 Wit shall not go unrewardedwhile f am king of this country. STEPHANo4, 1r 240 cALJBAN low. 4, I, 248 villainous 52 With foreheads is The rarer action 53 5r'I,27 In virtue than in vengeance, PRoSPERo 54 Ye elvesof hills, brooks, standinglakes,and groves; And ye that on the sandswith printlgslfo,ot Do chasethe ebbingNeptune,b,nddo fly him 5, I, 33 When he comesback. PnosPERo I'll break *y stafi, 55 Bury it certain fathoms in the earth, And deeperthan did everplummet sound 5, I, 54 I'll droor *y book. pno3pnno 56 Where the beesucks,there suck I; In a cowslip'sbell I lie; There I codch when owls do cry. On the bat's back I do fly After srunmermerrily. Merrily, merrily shall I live now Under the bloslom that hangson the bough. ARIEL 5, Ir 88 57 How beauteousmankind isl O bravenew world 5, I, 183 That has suchpeoplein'tl r'rnsrol Milan, where Retire me to my 58 -m)t grave. PRosPERo 5, 1, 310 Every third thought shall be Tlmon of Athens 59 Tis not enoughto help the feebleup But to support him after. TrMoN d} I wonder men dare trust themselveswith men.
I, I, Irc APEII,TANTUS
6l IJncover,dogs,and lap. TIMoN Titus Andronlcus 62 Sweetmercy is nobilrty's true badge. TAI\{oRA 63 Sheis a woman, thereforemay be woo'd; Sheis a woman, thereforemay be won; Sheis Iavinia, therefore must be lov'd.
1, 2142 3, 6185
I, I, I19
Shakspeare
358
What, man! more water glideth by the mill Than wots the miller of; and easyit is Of a cur loaf to steala shiye,weknol:fo/,mr,2, I,g2 64 It one good deedin all my life I did, f do repent it from my very soul, AARoN
5, 3, 189_
Troilus and Ctessida 65 Women are angels,wooing: Things won are donei joy's sou! lies in the dcing. That shebelov'd knows nought that knows not this: Men prize the thing ungain'd more than it is. cr.sislDA I, 2, 278 The heavens planets, themselves,the 66 and this centre, Observedegree,priority, and place, Insisture, course,proportion, season,form, 1, 3r 85 Office, and custom, in all line of order. ur,yrsrs O, when degreeis shak'd, 67 Which is the ladder of all high designs, Ir 3, I0I The enteqpriseis sickl ur.yssns 68 Take but degreeaway, untune that string, Ir 3, 109 And hark what discord followsl 't Lytssrs 69 I would thou didst itch from head to foot and I bad ths 2, I, 26 scratching of tbee. TEIERSTITS 7A To be wise and love 312, 152 Exceedsman's might. cRESSIDA at his back' my a hath, lord, wallet 7I Time 'Wherein hb puts alms for oblivion, 3, 3, 145 A great-siz'clmonster of ingratitudes. t]LYssEs 72 One touch of nature makes the whole world kin. ul,yssFs
3, 3, 175
73 There's languagein her €Ie, her cheekrher liP, Nay, her fobt speaks;her wantoq spirits look out 415r 55 At everyjoint and motive of her body. ur,YssEtt holds else 74 Ircheg/,- lecheryl Stitl wars and lecheryl Nothing 512, 193 fashion. THERsrrEs Twelfth Nisht 75 ff music be the food of love' PlaI onr Give me excessof it, that, surfeitiog, The appetite may sickenand so die. That strain again! It had a dying fall; O, it same o'Er my eaxlike tf,e sweetsound
359
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That breathesupon a bank of violets, Stealingand givingodourl Enougq,no more; nTisnoi so sweetnow as it was before. DIJtr(B oRSINO Twelfth Night, I, I, I 76 Speaksthree or four languagesword for word without book. sIRToBYBELgfr I, 3, 24 Ir 3, 123 77 Is it a world to hide virtuesin? sm.ronY BELcH 78 Many a good hangingPreventsa bad marriage. rcsrr I, 5, 18 BELcII I, 5, 114 79 A plagueo' thesepickle-herringl sIRToBY 80 Make me a willow cabin at your gate, And call upon my soul within the louse; Write loyal-cantonsof contemnedlove And sing tlem troudevenin the deadplggnt; Halloo iour nameto the reverberatehills, And mdke the babbling gossipof the air I, 5, 252 ry out'Olivial' vIoLA Ir 5, 272 vlor,a cruett5t 81 Farewell, fair betimes. up be is to 82 Not to be abed after midnight srRToBYBETCTI2, 3, I roaming? you are mine, where mistress O 83 O, stay and hear; your true love's coming' That ian sing both high and low' Trip no further, pretty sweetingi Journeysend in loversPryling' 2r 3r 38 Every wise man's son doth kn6m rrsm hereafter; not love?'Tis 84 What is Presentmirth hath presentlaughter; What's to comeis still unsure. In delaythere lies no plenf, Then cbmekiss 0e, sweetand twentYi 2, 3, 46 Youth's a stuff rryillnot endure. I:EsIB
it withabetter 85Hedoes ouo;*X[#ffi"ffiH".2,',Ts 86 Is there no resPectof place,Per$ons'nor time, in you?
IYIALVOLIO 21 3r 89
87 Dost thou think, becausethou art virtuous, there shall be no 2, 3n!09 more cakesand ale? sIRToBYBELcIT death; awg, 88 Come awa/, come And in sad cypresslet me be laid; breath, FIy away,By away, -cnrel maid" I an stain by a fair
ShkesBeare
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My shroudof white, stuck all with y.*n O, prepareit ! My part of deathno one so true fiielfth Night, 2, 4, 50 Did shareit. rEsrr Shenevertold her love, 89 But let concealment,like a worrn i' th' bud, Feedon her damaskcheek.Shepin'd in thought; And with a greenand yellow melancholy Shesat like Patienceon a monument, 2, 4, Io9 Smiling at grief. vIoLA 90 I am all the daughtersof my father's house, 2, 4, lIg And all the brothers too. vIoLA have agd some greatnesq, 9l Some are born great, some achieve greatnessthrusfupon 'em, Unr,vofio (readingletter) 2, 5, 129 92 Rememberwho commendedthy yellow stockings,and wish'd to seethee ever cross-garter'd. lvtAlvouo (readingletter) 215, 135 93 O world, how apt the poor are to be proudt or,rvn, 3, I, 124 94 Love sought is good, but given unsoughtis better. oLrvIA 3, I, 153 314153 95 Whn this is very midsummermadness. otrvlA 96 If this were play'd upon a stagenow, I could condemnit as an 314, I2I improbable fiction. TABIAN 314, 136 97 More matter for a May morning. FABIAN 9S Stilt you keep o' th' windy side of the law. FABIAN 3, 4, 156 99 Out of my lean and low abilitY 314, 328 I'll lend you something. vroia 1 I hate ingratitudemore in a man Than lyiig, vainness,babbling drunkenressr Or any taiit of vice whosestrongcorruPtion 31 41 338 Intrabits our frail blood' vIoLA rESTB revenges. his in brings 2 And thus the whirligig of time 5, I, 363
3 When that I was and a little tiny boy' With hey, ho, the wind and tfre rain, A foolish thing wasbut a toYt For the rain ifraineth gvery day. FEsrB
5, 1r 375
The Trvo Gentlemenof Verona 4 Home-keepingyouth have ever homely wits. vAtE[.rrINB IrIr2
361
Shkespeato
5 I haveno other but a wonnan'greason: I think him so, becauseI think him so. LUcBTTA T'hefrvo Gentlemenof Yerotw,Ir 2123 6 O, how this spring of love resernbleth I, 3r 84 ffie uncertaid gldy of an April day. PRotEUs ? Dumb jewels often in their silent kind More than quick words do move a woman's mind. vAtENrrNB 3, Ir 90 8 Who is Silvia? \ilhat is she, That all our swainscomrnendher? 412, 38 Holn fair, and wise is she. soNcl 9 Is shekind as sheis fair? 4, 2143 For beaurylives with kindness, soNo 514,I 10 How use doth breeda babit in a manl var.nrgrnm man were heaven' O, 11 514, II0 But constant,he wereperfectl PRorsutl Ile Winter's TaIe 12 Tgvolads that thought thue was no more behind But sucha daytomorrow as to-dali I, 2163 And to be boi eternal. PoLD(ENEs 13 A sadtale's best for winter. f have ono 2, I, 25 Of sprites and goblins. IyIAMILutts \Mhat's gone and what's Past helP 14 3, 21219 Shoutd be pist grief. uunia, pntrcrroN 3, 3, 58 15 Exit, purcuedby a bear. srAcB of twenty' and 16 I would there were no agebetweenten and three ths nothingjn is there restifor thg sleep6ut would that youth winches with chil{ unonging the ancientry' beffi6enbut getting -sffPrfiRD 3r 3r 59 stealing,fighIing. 17 \ilhen daffodils begin to peer' With heighl thld9ry 6ver lht {ale' Why, then comesin the sweeto' th9 y€T' for the red blood reignsin the winter's pale' AT'TIOLYCUS 413rI 4r 3r 26 18 A snapper-upof unconsideredtrifles. AullolYcus 19 Jog oD,jog otr, tho fgotPqlh way' And merrily hent tho stile'a; A merry heart goesall the day' 413, II8 Your sad tires in a mile-a. Auror.Ycus 20 For you there'srosemry and rue; thesekeep Sttdiog and sayour all ihe winter long. PBRDITA 4r 41 74
Shakespeare
362
2l
What you do Still betterswhat is done.When you speak,sweet, I'd haveyou do it ever.When you sing, I'd haveyou bry and sellso; so givealms; Pruy so; and, for the ord'ring your affairs, To sing them too. FrpRrzEL The Winter's Tale,414, 135 22 Lawn as white as driven snow. AUToLycus 4141 2I5 23 The self-samesuinthat shinesupon his court" pERDrrA 414, 436 24 Frosperity'sthe very-bond of love, Whose freshcomplexionand whoseheart together Affiiction alters. cAMrLLo 414, 565 25 Though I am not naturally honest,f am so sometimesby chan@. AUToLYcus 414170I me 26 Let have no lying; it becomesnone but tradesmen. AurolYcus 41417II 27 Though.authg.ritybe a stubbcrn bear, yet he is oft led Uy $: nose with gold. cl,owN 4, 41790 Sonnets 28 To the onlie begetterof theseinsuingsonnets. Dedication 29 From fairest creatureswe desireincrease, That therebybeauty'srose might neverdie. SonnetL 30 Look in thy glass,and tell the facethou viewest. Sonnet3 31 But whereforedo not you a mightier way Make war upon this bloody tyrant Time? Sonnet16 32 Shatl I comparethee to a summer's day? Thou art more lovely and more temperate. Rough winds do shakethe darling buds of Man Sonnet18 And sumrner'sleasehath all too short a date. 18 Sonnet not thy eternal shall fade. But summer 33 34 So long as men can breatheor eyescan see, Sonnet18 So long lives this, and this giveslife to thee. 35 A woman'sface,with Nature's own hand painted, Sonnet20 Hast thou, the Master Mistressof my passion. 36 For thy sweetlove rememb'redsuchwealth brings Sonttet29 That then I scorn to changemy statewith krngs. 37 When to the sessionsof sweetsilent thought f summonup remembranceof things past, I sigh the lack of many a thing I sought, Anal with old woesnew wail my deartime's waste. Somet 30
363
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38 But if the while I think on thee,dearfriend, Sonnet3A All lossesare restored,and sorrowsend. in 39 So true a fool is love that your will, Sonnet57 Thoughyou do anything,he thinks no ill. 40 Like as the wavesmaketowardsthe pebbledshore, Sonnet60 So do our nrinuteshastento their end. 4I Someglory in their birth, somein their skill, Somein their wealth,somein their body'sforce; Somein their garments,though new-fangledill; Somein their hawks and hounds,somein their horse, toonet 9I deeds by their things turn soufest , zFor sweetest Sonnet94 Lilies that festersmell far worsethan weeds. 43 How like a winter hath my absencebeen From thee,the pleasureof the fleetingyearl Sonnet97 What freezingshave I felt, what darkdays seenl the springn in have been absent I 44 From you When proud-pigd April, dress'din all his trim, Sonnet98 Hath put a sfirit of youth in every thiog. 45 When in the chronicle of wastedtime Sonnet106 f seedescriptionsof the fairest weights. present days, now behold these 46 For wg, which ,SonnetIA6 Have eyesto wonder, but lack tonguesto;raise, 47 l-et me not to the marriageof true minds Admit impediments.Love is not love TVhichalters when it alteration finds, Or bendswith the removerto remove, O, no! it is an ever-fixedmark, Sonnet116 That looks on tempestsand is nevershaken. 48 Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks, But bearsit out evento the edgeof doom. If this be error, and upon me prov'd, SonnetItO f neverwrit, nor no nian everlov'd. 49 'Tis better to be vile than vile esteemed, SonnetI2I When not to be receivesreproachof being. 50 Th' expenseof spirit in a wasteof shame Is ltst in action;-andtill action, lust Is perjur'd, murd'rous, bloodR full of blame' Savage,extreilo, nrde, cruel, not to trustl Sonnet129 Eojo}'d no soonerbut despisedstraight. 51 AIl this the world well knows; yet none knows well Sonnet 129 To shun the heaventhat leadsfoen to this hell,
Shakespeare
3ffi
52 My mistress'eyesare nothing like the sun'' Ctiral is far m6re red than hEr iipr; ied, 53 And yet, by heaven,I think my love as rare As any shebelied with falsecompare. 54 When my love swearsthat sheis made of truth, I do believeher, though I know shelies. 55 Two lovesI have,of comfort and despair, Which like two spirits do suggestme still; The better angel is a man right fair, The worser spirit a woman colour'd ill,
Sonnet130 Sonnet130 Sonnet138
Sonnet144
Poems 56 Crabbedage and youth cannot lirretogether: Youth is full of pleasan@,ageis full of care; Youth like summermorn, 8Bolike winter weather; Youth like summerbrave, sga like winter bare. T'hePassiorutePilgrim, 12 Ib 57 Ag€, f do abhor thee; youth, f do adorethee. 58 The first heire of my invention. YenusandAdonis,Dedication Ib, I, 4 59 Hunting he lov'd, but love he laugh'd to scorn, 60 Beauty itself doth of itself persuade The eyesof men without an orator. TheRapeof Lucyecq I, 29 SHAW George Bernard, 185G1950 61 Breakag€s, Limited, the biggest industrial- coqporation io. th9 Tke Apple Cart, Act I countqy. BALBUs inside of his holsters the by always soldier You can tell an old 62 and cartridge boxes.Theyoungonescarrypistolsandcartridgesi the old onesgrub. BLr,JNTscHrr Arms and the Man, Act I 63 You are a very poor soldier: a chocolatecreamsoldierl RAn{A Ib, Act I Back to 64 It is enough that there l'sa beyond. LILrrrr Methuselah,Part SrLast words 65 When a stupid man is doing somethinghe is ashamedo{, he always declaresthat it is his dut1r. r ApoLIpDoRUs Caesarand Cleopatra,Act 3 66 We haveno more right to consumehappinesswithout producing it than to oonsume wealth without producing it, MoRsu, Candida,Act I 67 The overpayinginstinct is a generousone: better than the underIb, Act I paying instinct, and not so common. MoRELL
365
Shrl
68 I'm only a beer teetotaller,not a champagneteetotaller. PRoSRPTNECandida,Act 3 69 lnfi.ttytdom . , . is the only way in which a man can become famoin without ability. ir.Rcovars T''heDevil'sDiscple, Act 3 70 swINDoN:What will History say? BttRGoyNE: History, slr, will tell lies, as usual. Ib, Act 3 7I Stimulatethe phagosytes. B. B. Tlte Doctor's Dilemnw, Act I 72 Go anywherein England where there a"renatural, wholesome, contented,and really nice English people; and what do you always find ? That the stablesire the reht centre of the hofisehold. r.ADY.m Heaitbreak'House,Act 3 73 Tell me all me faults as man to man, I can stand anything but flattery. TrM trohnBull's other Isiand,Act I 74 The more a man knows, and the further he travels, the more Iikely he is to marry a country girl afterwards. KEEcAT{ Ib, Act 2 75 My lay of joking is to tell the truth. Its the funniestjoke in the ' world. KEEcAT{Ib 76 r am a Millionaire, That is my religion, uNDERnrratrT Major Barbara, Act 2 77 \Mot prawceselvytionnah? BrrJ.wATKER Ib 78 A lifetime of happinesslNo man alivecould bear it: it would be hell on earth. rAr.rrrrER Man and supermwt,Act I 79 There is no love sincererthan the love of food. TAr{NR Ib 80 The true artist will let his wife starye,his children go barefoot, his motler ItOS.t for his living at seventy,soonef than worli at anythingbut his art. TAI.TNER Ib 81 It is a womansbusineF!o ggt rnarriedas soonaspossible,and a mansto keepunmalried ai long as he can. TAr{rvERIb, Act 2 82 +" E$tishman thinks he is moral when he is only - uocorlfortable. TrrEDEvrL Ib, Act 3 83 Thereare t*o tragediesin life. Oneis to loseyour hearts desire. J The other is to gain it. MENDoZA Ib, Act 4 84 4ry personunder the ageof thirty, who, having any knowledge of the existingsocialoriier, is nof a revolutioniSt,ii an inferio?
85we rearn from h,,,#; #;r:iffi::|il#;::rki:;-*i, 86 The golden nrle is that there are no goJdenniles.
Ib, Macims fo, Revolutiorrtsts
Shar
366
meaff' *;Ftr,*fy;ffi #[ffi:,i"ru 87tibertv #fi|,,il,,,
Ib 88 He who can,does.He who cannot,teaches. 89 Marriage is popular becauseit combinesthe maximumof Ib temptaiionwith^themaximumof opportunity. kennel, in the to have friends arepermitted 90 .Ladiesandgentlemen Ih but not in ihe kitchen, Ib , 9I Eveqyman overforty is a scoundrel versions hudled a are there retrgion, &ough lbere is one onty 92 'u v r PlaysPleasant,Preface Of it. 93 Remember that you are a human being with a soul and the divine gift of artitutate speechithat youfnatlvg languaggit tq" tanguafe of Shakespearand Milton and The Bible; a$ dont sit, there crooning like a bilious Prgeon. TIIGGINS
ryt*X;::i
94 I dodt want to talk gramma"r,f want to talk like a lady, . a EuzL Ib, Act 2 95 Time enough to think of the future when you havedt any Ih futtre to thlnk of. EIGcINs 96 Im one of the undeservingpoor: thats what I am. Think of what that means to a rnarr. It-means that he's up agen middle class Ib morality allthe time. Door.rrrr,n 97 NIy aunt died of influenza3so they said . . . But its my belief Ib, Act 3 th6y done the old woman in. w.lutr Ib 9S Tt/alklNot bloodyliketf srxzl yo! 99 No eggsl No eggsll Thousand thunders, 4u' lhat {o ,Sainttroan,Sceie I mean-b'yno egg57 RoButT the saueoneshave See where people now. mad *""t a few \Me I Ib landed usl PottLENcEY 2 Thear voicestelling me what to do. They comefrom God. JoAhr Ib is the That 3 A miracle, my friend, is an eventwhich createsfaith. pu{pose and iratrrre of miracles. ARcIIBTsHoP Ib, Scene2 4 Do not think vou can friehten me by telling me that I am alone. France is aloie; aud G;d is alone-;and ihat is my loneliness before the lonelinessof my country and my r God? JoAr.I Ib, scene5 You have heard the last of her. 5 TIIBEI<ECImoNER: Ib, Scene6 wARwrcK: Ihe last of her? I{ml I wonderl
is it not,exaept 6 Alt dress isfancydress, "Hrff"sra1;Hlrrr*
367
Shelley
7 rcqr sL you never can tell. Thats a principle in life with oo, sirnif youll excusemy having sucha thing, sir. wAxrER YouNever Can TeIl, Act 2 8 With the singleexceptionof llomer, there is no eminentwriter, not evenSir Walter Scott, whom I can despiseso entirely as I despiseShakespeare when I measuremy mind againsthi5. Dranutic Opinionsand Essays,Yol, 2152 SIIEI,I",EY, Percy Bysshe,YM24W2 9 I weepfor Adonais- he is'deadl O, weepfor Adonaisl though ou tears Thaw not the frost which binds so dear a headI Afuruis, I 10 Ah, woe is mel Winter is come and gone, But grief returns with the revolving year. !h, 154 1l Through wood and stream and field and hilt and Ocean A quickeninglife from the Earth's heart has burst As it has ever done, with changeand motion, From the gFeatmorning of tlre world when first God daumedon Chaos. Ib, 163 12 AJras! that all we loved of him shouldbe, But for our grref, as if it had not been, And gftrf itself be mortall Ib, I8I 13 The Pilgrim of Eternity, whosefame Over his living head like Heavenis bent, lb,264 An early but enduring monument, Ib, 280 14 A pardlike Spirit beautiful and swift. thy famel 15 Live thorr, whoseinfamy is not Livel fear no heavierchastisementfrom rrG, Ib, 325 Thou notelessblot on a rememberednamel t6 He has outsoaredthe shadowof otu night; Envy and calurnny and hate and pah, And that unrest wtricn men miseill delight, Can touch him not and-torturenot again; From the contagionof the world's slow stain He is secure,ood now can never mourn Ib, 352 A heart grown cold, a head gpo!\mgray in vain. Ib, 361 r7 He lives,he wakes-'tis Death is dead,not he. l8 He is a portion of the loveliness Ib, 379 Which oncehe made more lovely. 19 The Oneremains,the many changeand Passi _ Heaven'slight foiever shides,Earlh's shddowsfly; Ltr, like a-domeof nnany'colouredglass, lbr 60 Staiis the white radianceof Eternityl
She$sy
368
The soul of Adonais, liko a star, Beaconsfrom the abodo whensthe Eternal arro. Adonals,494 2I I bring fresh showersfor the thirsting flowers, lTre Cloud,I From the seasand the stneams. n, Iwietd the flait of the lashing tait' And whiten the gpen pl-ainsunder, And then again I dissolveit in rain, -And laugh as f passin thunden 23 f n'rr the daughter of Earth and \Mater' And the-nursiineof the Sky; f 'pass throueh the p6rw of the-oceanand shores; nb,73 I chang6,but icannot die. 24 l{ow wonderftrl is Deatb" Death and his brother Sleepl TTteDacmonof tln World, I, I 25 f never was attachedto that great sectrWhose doctrine is, that eachbne should select Out of the crowd a mistressor a ftiend" And all the rest, though fair and wise, commend Eppsychldion,149 To cold oblivion. 26 True Love in this differs from gold and clan Ib, 160 That to dinde is not to take away. n Good-nieht? ah! no; the hour is ill lYhich-seversthose it should unite; I.et us remain together still, Good-Night,I Then it will be-goodnight. 20
28 The world's great agebegins anew, The golden years ttturn, The earth doth like a snakerenew Her winter weedsoutworn: Heaven smiles,ottd faiths and empiresgleam' frellas, 1060 Like wrecks of a dissolving dream. ST Maddolor and Jultet 29 Thou Paradiseof exiles, ItatYI 30 I met Mtrder on the way Ihe Mask of Anuchyr S He had'a mask like Castlereagh. 3l Shake your chains to earth like dew Which in sleephad fallen on You Ib, 153 Ye axe many: thel anefen'. waw, the western 32 Swiftlv- walk o'er Spirit of Nightl misty easte'tncavgt of Out 'Where,the all the lbqg and lone dayiight' To Niglt, I Thou wovest dreans ofjoY and fear.
369
Shelley
33 I ask of thee,belov0dNight Swift be thine approachingflight, Comesoon,soon! To Night,33 34 A gloriouspeoplevibratedagain The lightning of the nations. Ode to Liberty, I 35 O Witd West Wind, thou breath of Autumn's being, Thou, from whoseunseenpresencethe leavesdeadAre driven, like ghostsfrom an enchanterfleeing, Yelloq and black, and pale, and hecticred, Pestilence-stricken multitudes, Odeto tlre West Virld, I 36 Wild Spirit, which art moving everywhere; Destroyerand preserver;hear, oh, hearl Ib, I3 37 Oh, lift me as a wave,a leaf, a cloudl I fall upon the thorns of lifel I bleedl A beavyweight of hours has chainedand bowed Onetoo like thee: tameless,and swift, and proud. Ibr 53 38 Scatter,as frorn an unextinguishedhearth Ashesand sparks,DI words among mankindl Be through my lips to unawakenedearth The trumpet of a prophecyl O, Wind, If \Minter comes,can Spring be.far behind? Ib, 6 met 39 I a tralreller from antiqueland Who said: Tlvo vast and trunklesslegsof stons Standin the desert. Ozymmtdias,I 40 And on the pedestalthesowords appear: 'My nameis Ozymandias, king ef kingsl Look on my works, Ie Mighty, and despairl' Nothing besideremains.Round the decay Of that colossalwreck, boundlessand bare Ibr 9 The lone and level sandsstretchfar away. 4l Hell is a city much like Londorrr A populous and a smo$r city. Peter BeA fie Thbd, Port 3, HeIl, I Ib, 196 42 Crucified'twixt a smile and whimpen 43 But from thesecreatehe can Fonns more real than living - man, ProntetheusAnbound,1r747 Nurslingsof irnmortalityl Yet all love is sweet, 44 Given or returned.Commonas light is love, Ib, 2, 5, 39 And its familiar voiceweariesnot ever. Ibr 4, 403 45 Famitiar acts are beautiful through love.
Sheilsy
370
46 A SensitivePlant in a gardengrrew' And tho young winds fed it with silver dew' And it openedits fan-Iike leavesto the light, And closedthem beneaththe kissesof Night,
TTteSercittw Plant,I) I
47 It is a modest creed,and yet Pleasantif one considersit, To oqm that death itself must be, Ib, Concluslon,126 Like all the rest, a mockery. 48 For iovenand beauiy, ancideiighi, Ib,Ib, 134 There is no death nor change. blithe to thee, Spiritl Hail 49 Bird thou never wert, That from Heaven,or near it, Pourest thy full heart To a Skylark, I In profuse strains of unpremeditatedart. 50 We look before and after, And pine for what is not: Our sincerestlaughter With somepait is fraughti .^ Our sweetestsodgsare thosEthat tetl of saddestthouglrt. Ib, 86 51 Teach me half the gladness That thy brain must kno% Such hanironious madness From mv lips would ffow lhe world stroufOfisten then - os I a,mlistening now. Ib, I0I 52 Raretn rarely, comest thou' ,Song,Rarely, Rarely, ComestTlpa Spiiit of Delightl Sornet, 53 An old, mad, blind, despised,and dy*S king. Y Englandin I8I9 54 Music, when soft voicesdie' Vibrates in the memorYOdours, when sweetvi-oletsslcken, Live within the sensethey quicken, Rose leaves,when the rose is deadt Are beapedfor the belov&d'sbed; when thou art -gonc, And so ttry thoughts, -slumber To -, Music, When Sofi on, Love itseli shalt YoicesDte 55 I fear thy kisses,gentlemaiden, Thou needstnot fear mine; My spirit is too deeplyladen To -, I Fes Tky "8ftsss iivir to burthen thiie.
37r
ShcrLhn
56 The desireof the moth for the star, Of the nigfutfor the morro% The devotion to somethingafar From the sphereof our sorrow,
To -, One Word is too often Profaned 57 Poetry lifts the veil from the hidden beauty of the world, and makesfamiliar objectsbe as if they werenot f,amiliar. A Defenceof Poetry 58 Poetry is the record of the best and happiest moments of the happiestand bestminds. Ib 59 Poetsare the unacknowledgedlegislatorsof the world, Ib SHENSTONE, William, 1714-1763 60 Whoe'erhas travell'd life's dull round, Where'erhis stagesmay havebeen, May sigh to think he still has found The warmestwelcome,at an inn.
Written at an Inn at IIenIey
SIIERIDAI{, Philip Henry, 1831-1888 61 The only good Indian is a deadIndian.
Attributed
Richaril Brinsley, 1751-1816 SM 62 Yes, sir, putrng is of various sorts; the principal ar9, the putr direct,the puffpreliminary, the puffcollateral, the putrcollusive, and the puff oblique, or putr by implication. puEF The Critic, Act, I, Scene2 63 No scandalabout QueenEliza,bethI hope. sNEER Ib, Act 2, SceneI 64 An oystermay be crossedin love. TTLBURTNA Ib, Act 3, SceneI
does 65rhought notbecome ayou"g *|ffF,r"ffffi?Ir,
66 Illiterate him, I say,quite from your memory. rvrALApRopIb 'Tis in 67 safest matrimony to begin with a little aversion. MRS IvTALAPROP Ib
6B A circulating library in a town is as an ever-greentree of diabolicalknowiedge!It blossomsthrough the year. srRANTrror.rrABsoLurE Ib 69 A progeny of learning. MRsr\,rArApRop Ib 70 A superciliousknowledgein accounts. MRsruAr"apRop Ib
Sheridan
372
T If I reprehendany tbing in this world it is the useof my oracular tongub and a nice deringement of epitaphs. MRsrr,rlr,lrnop fkA Rivals,Act 3, Scene3 headstrong the banks of the NiIe. 72 As as an allegoqyon MRII MALAPRoP
Ib
73 Too civil by half, AcRBs Ib, Act 3, Scene4 74 You shall see them on a beautiful quarto page, where a neat rirnrlet of text shall meander tnroulU a meiOow of margin. sIRBENtrAI\uN BAcKBITBSchoolfor Scandal, Act i, SceneI 15 Though I cadt make her love ffie, there is great satisfactionin quarrelling with her. sIn pErERTr,Az;LE Ib, Act 2, SceneI 76 There is the whole setl a characterdeadat everyword. TEAaLE Ib, Act 2, Scene2 sIRPETER 77 I'rn called awayby particular business.But I leavemy character behind me. srRPETER TEAzLE Ib 78 Here's to the maiden of bashful fifteen; Here's to the widow of fifty; Here's to the flaunting extravagant quean, And here's to the hotsewife that's thrifty, I-et the toast pass,Drink to the lass,
I'll warrant she'llPtou;*u?rrffiff,r##
S #iLrr 3,scene
79 What is pringiple against the flattery of a handsorro, lively young fellow? srRrETERTEAzr.E Ib, Actr 4, Scene2 80 The Right Honourable gentlemanis indebtedto his memory for his jests, and to his imagination for his facts. Reply to Mr Dundas,Houseof Commons SIIERI\{AhL General Wiiliam Tecumsehr1S20-1891 81 There is many a boy here today " who looks on war as all gl9ry, but, boys, it is all hell. Speech,1880 SIDNEY, Algernon, 162?A683 82 Liars ought to havegood memories.
Discourseson Clt. 2, 15 Government,
SIDNEY, Sir Philip, 1554-15S6 83 My true love hath my heart, and I havehis, By just exchangeone for another given: I hold his dear, and mine he cannot miss, There never was a better bargain driven,
TheArcadia, 3
373
Skeftm
84 Biting my truant pen,beatingmyselffor spite: 'Foolt' said my Museto me, 'look in thy heart and write.' Astropheland Stella, SonnetI 85 With how sad steps,O Moon, thou climb'st the skies! How silently, and with how wan a facel Ib, Sonnet3I 86 With a tale forsooth he cometh unto lou, with a tale which holdeth children from play, and old men from the chimney nre Defenceof Poesy corner. mine rnust confess own barbarousness, f f neverheard 87 Certainly, the old song of Percyand Douglas, that I found not my heart moved more than with a trumpet. Ib Ongiving his water 88 Thy nwessity is geater than mine. bottle to a dyr*g soldierat Zutphen, 1586 SII\d,S,GeoqgeRobertr IWI;$XD 89 It was ChristmasDuy in the \Morkhouse.
ChristmasDoy in the Worklnuse
sITWEtr,' Edith, 1887-199 90 StiU falls the Rain Dark as the world of man, black as orr lossBlind as the nineteenhundred and forty nails ,Still Falls tlp Rain [.Ipon the Cross. SITWELT' Slr Osbert' I$!I-969 9l the British Botrgeoisie Is not born, And doesnot die, But, if it is ill,
look in its eyes. It hasa frrghtened
At the House of Mrs Kinfoot
SIruLTON' John' 1460?-1529 92 For thoughmy rymeberagged, Tattered and jagged, Rudely rayne beaten, Rusty and mothe eaten; If ye take well thenrith, It hath in it somepyth. 93 \ryith solaceand gladness, Much mirth and no madness, All good and no badness.
Colyn Cloute,2, 53 To MistressMargaret Hussey
Snsrt
374
SIVIART, Ctristopher, I7t24771 94 Glorious the northern lights astrearn; Glorious the soogrwhen God's the theme; Glorious the thunder's roar. Songto Davidr SS 95 And now the matchlessdeed'sachieved, Determined, dared, and donel lb,86 FbancfuEnward, 1818-186t W 96 You are looking as fresh as paint, fte*
Fahleigh,Ch, 4I
SI\dfffI, Adam, I;7234790 97 No society can surely be flourishing and happy, of which the far
partof themembers greater arcn"7ir?ir#iffli;tions,
r,8
98 To found a gFeatempire fgtjhg :"19 prxpose of ryising up.a people of qrstomerts,EaI at first sight appeara project fit only for a nation of shopkeepers.ft is, however,a project altogether unfit for a nation of shopkeepers;but extremelyflt for a nation that is governedby shopkeepers, Ib, 214 SMftII, Ingatr Pearsat[ 1865-!946 99 Happinessis a wine of the rarest vintage, illd seemsinsipid to a rnrlgar taste. Aftertltoughts,I, LW frrd frumnt Nature I There a^nefew sorrovs, however poignant, in which a goo4 Ib income is of no avail 2 The vnetchednessof being rich fu that you live with ri(
Ibr4rr"n:ff::i;
3 People say that Life is the thing, but I prefer Read!-ng. Ibr 6, Myself 4 Thank heavens,the $un has gone in, and I don't haveto go oqt Inst words and enjoy it, SI\IIITI, Samuel Francis, 1808-1895 5 My countrSr,'tis of thee, Sweetland of libert/, Of thee I sing.
Anurica
SilfiInl, Sydney, InbI845 6 Poverty is no disgraceto a man, but it is confoundedlyincor. Iilis Wit and Wisdom venienl. I-ody ? No fnrniture so charming as books, - flolland, Memoir, YoLI, Ch,9
375
Somerdne
I How ciur a bishop marry? How can he flirt? The most he can say fu, 'I will seeIou in the vest*ryStt{ the-service.'Lady Holland, Memoir, Yol. I, Ch.9 there axethree sexes,- men, women, ood French say, 9 As the Ib clergnnen. Ib 10 Praiseis the best diet for us, after all. I T I neyerread a book beforereviewingit; it prejudicesa man so. If, Pearson,The Smith of Smiths, Ch. 3 I-etter to secretof life. 12 I am convinceddigestion is the g3eat -Arthur Kinglaka,30 Sept. 1837 13I haveno relish for the country; it is a kind of healthy grave. ktter to Miss G. Haruurt, 1838 SMOLLETT' Tobias George, 17214771' 14 Hark ye,€linker, you ?re a most notorious offender.You stand and want. convidtedof sickness,hungernwretchednessn flumphrey Clir*er 15 Somefolk are wisenand some are othemise. Rderick Rutdom, Ck,6 16f considerthe world as made for ffio, not me for the world. It is my maxim therefcre to enjoy - it while I can, and le_tfuturity Ib, Ch.45 shift for itself. .SfrLaunceloteGreavers 17 Tnre patriotism is of no par[r. ktter to 18 That great Cham of fiterature, SamuelJobnson. John Wilkes,16 March 1759,quoted in Boswell'sLife of Jihnson SNAGGE Johtt, 190419 I can't seewho's ahead- it's either Oxford or Cambridge. BBC Cornrtuntaryon Boat Race, 1949 socRATES, #y399 B.C n lan a citizrln,not of Athens or Greece,but of the world. Plutarch, De fuilio 2l Other men live to eat, whereasf eat to live. Plutarch, Moralb
B.C. sotoN, Efo?-558? 22 Calt no man happy until he dies; he il at Ftt forfirnate. frerofutus, flistories, I, 32 SOMERVILI,E Willlam' 167541{/ The chase,the qPort sg kingsi 23 Image of war, without its guilt.
TTreCluse,I, 13
Soule
376
SOLJLETJohn BabsoneLane, 1815-1891 24 Go west,young marL Tene HauteExpress,Indiana,1851 SOUTHEY, Robert, I77+I843 25 My daysamongthe Dead are past: Around me I behold, IVhere'erthesecasualeyesare cast, My Days amongthe Dead The mighty minds of old. 26 Yet leavinghere a namo,f trust, That will not perish in the dust. n ft was a summer'sevening, T'heBattle of Blenlreim Old Kaspar'swork was done. the green 28 And by him sported on Ib His litlle grandchild Wilhelmine. 29 But what they fought each other for, Ib I could not well make out. 30 'And everybodypraisedthe Duke TVhothis heaf neht did win.' 'But what-gooddme of it at last?' little Peterkin. Quoth 'Why that I cannot tellr' said he, tBut-'twas a famous victory.' Ib SPENICER' Herbert' 182F1903
3l Time: that which man is alwaystrying to kill, but which Dtrtnitions ends in killing him, fulucation,Ch,2 32 Scienceis organizedknowledge. 33The Republicanform of Governmentis the ttig.hgtt.ry*, of of this it requirestl. Fghesttlpe of but because government; f,unrannattre - a type nowhereat presentextsting. n#rir#* Principlesof Biology 34 Survival of the fittest. ^SocialStatics, Part 2 Ib 36 Educationhas for its object the formation of character. for human --e'-- - wherethere is least regard -5 -is strongest 37 Ffe,ro-worship v Ib, Part 3 ireeaom.
3sWe all decryprejudigeryet are all prejudiced.
Elmund' 1552?-1599 SPED.ISER' 38 Thewoodsshallto me answerandmy EchorEB.-. . Epitlnlamion,18
3n
Sphg-Rice
39 Ahl when will this long weary day haveend, And lend me leaveto cbme unto my love? Epithalamion,278 40 Fierce war$ and faithful loves shall moralize my song. The Fairie Queen,Book 1, Introduction,StanzaI Ib, Book I, 4l A gentleknight was pricking on the Plain. Canto, I, I 42 Sleepafter toil, port after stormy seas, Eas6after wnrr deathafter life doesgreatlyplease, Ib, Book, I, Canto9140 behold, she did 43 And as shelooked about, How over that samedoor was likewisewrit, Ib, Book 3, Be bold, be bold, and everywhereBe bold. Canto 11r54 44 Dan Chaucer,well of English undefiled, _ Ib, Book 4, On Fame'seternalbeadroll vlorthy to be filed. Canto 2, 32 45 The gentlemind by gentledeedsis known, For a man by nothiog v is so well bewrayed Ib, Book 6, Canto,3, I As by his minners. 46 Calm was the day,and through the trembling ab Protlnlamion, I Sweetbreathing Zeptrynrsdid softly play. Ib, 18 47 SweetThames!run softly, titl I end my Song. 48 So now they have made.our English tongue a gallimaufry or
speeches, ofanother hodgepodge Y,ff{f;#ff#ffi
their titles take. Anrnrmc!ry&the hynn in 49 Kinguering -Ntw v Congs CollegeCtnpel, Oxford, 1579$ee 95;/8) 50 Sr, you havetastedtwo whole wormsi ]ou havehissedall my mystery lectures and been caught fighting a liar in the quadi Auributed you will leaveby the next town drain. Attributed 51 Let us drink to the gueerold Dean. 52 I rememberyour name perfbcttn but I just can't thin! of-your Attributed fae. SPRING-RICE, Sir Cecil Arthurn 1858-1918 53 I vow to thee,ffiI country - all earthly things aboveEntire and whol6 and peifect, the serviceof,my love.I Yow to Thee,MI Country
Sprlng-Rie
378
54 T am the Dean of Christ Church, Sir, This is my wife,- look well at her. Sheis the Broad: I am the Htgh: 'u We are the University.
The Masgte of BaWiol
SQUIRE, Sh John Co[inss' 188+f958 'Ho, 55 It did not last: the Devil howling In Contlrunttonof quo. the status ber' restored I-etEinstein Popeon Newton(see248 r 88) 56 But I'm not so tnink a$you drunk I a^m. fuIiade of Soporfric ,4bsorytion STANLEY, Sir Henry Mortonr 1841-19M On nuettngLlvtngstone_io 57 Dr Livingstone, I prerume? V lt CentralAfrica, I0 Nov,I87I STAI{TON, Frank Lcbby' 18S7-19n 58 Sweetestli'l feller, everybodyknows; Dunno what to call hin, but he's mighty lak' a rose. M$hty l^al€ a Rose STEEI.E Slr Richard' ICI?FfiI2S, 59 Amons atl the diseasesof the mind thero is not ono mot€ epidedical or more prnicious than the lovo of flattery. Tfte Speaatori No, 238 a good gra@. gFow old with can so few are who 60 There Ib, No, 263 61 Reading is to the mind what exercisefu to tE body. Tlte Tatler, No. 147 SIEPHENT James Kennethr18Si9-1|89l2 62 Two voices are there: one is of the deeP. o. And one is of an old half-witted sheep \ilhich bleats articulate monotony Iapsw Calml, And indicates that two and one dre three. see412 : I) Sonnet(Puody of Word,sworth, 63 \ilhen the Rudyards ceasefrom kipling Ib, To.RJf. And the Haggards ride no more.
SIERNE, Lauence' nI34768 & T\ey order,saidI, this matterbetterin France. Asentlnentd words JoameftOpening
379
Stevensm
65 As an Englishmandoesnot trarrelto seeEnglistmffi, f retired A SentimentalJourney,Preface to my room" 66 I pity the man who can travel from Dan to Beersheba,and cr!, 'tis fit barren. Ib, In the Street, Caldis 67 There are worseoccupationsin the world than feeling a woman's Ib, TItePulse pulse. oto 'God the shorn larrrb.' said Maria, 68 tempersthe windr'
Icaughth,udl:;#rff, outmyband, 69 SothatwhenI stretched Ib, Last words de chambre's-. 70 'Our armies swor€terriblyJ in Flandersr' cried my Uncle Toby, 'but nothing to this.' Tristrai Shandyr'Book3, Ch. ii 'an pleaseyour honour, is exactlylike war in this; tha! a 1l l,ove, soldier,thoughhehasescapedthreeweekscomplete o' Saturday night,.- may - neverthelessbe shot through his heart olrylday Ib, Bookr S Ch. 2I morning. 'what ep-dt' is all this story about?n said my mother, 72 'A Cock and a Bullr' said Yorick, Ib, Inst words STEYEtrI{SON,Robert l,rlufu, 185F1894 73 Sing me a song of a lad that is gone, Say,could that lad be I? Merry of soul he sailed on a My Songsof TTavel,42 Ovbr the seato S$e. 74 Fifteen men on the dead man's chestYo-ho-ho and a bottle of ntm! Drink and the devil had done for the rest. soNcl TreasureIsland, Ch. I 75 Many's the long night I've dreamedof cheese- toasted, nqgst$: BEI-IGLTNN Ib, Ch. 15
?6 This be the verseyou grave for me: 'Ifere he lies wherehe longedto be; Home is the sailor, bome from sea, And the hunter home from the hill.'
Underuoods,Book I, 21,Requiem 7? Even if we take matrimony at its lowest, evbnif we regard it as no rnore than a sort of friendship recognisedby the police, YirginibusPuerisque,Part I 78 Extremebus5mess, whetherat school or college,kirk or market, is a s;rmptodrof deficientvitality. Ib, "4n-Apologyftr ldlers 79 There is no duty as the duty of beins much so underrate we Ib happy.
Stevcnson
380
80 To travel hopefully is a better thing than to arrive, and the truo successis to labour. WrginibusPuerisque,El Dorado SIEI{ENSON, William, 1530?-1575 8t f cannot eat bui little meat My stomachis not good; But sure I think that I can drink With him that wearsa hood. SoNc
GammerGurton's Needle,Act 2
82 I siuff my skin, so iuil wiihin, Ofjolly good ale and old, soNG STONE, Samuel John, 1839-1900 83 The Ctrurch'sone foundation fs JesusChrist her Inrd; Sheis His new creation Tlre Church'sOneFoundation By water and the Word. STOlryE, Ilarriet Elizabeth Beecherr1811-1896 84 'Never had any mother? What do you mean?Wherewereyou born?' 'Never was bornt'persisted Topsyi 'neverhad no father, nor mother, nor nothin'. I was raised by a specutator.' Unile Tom's Cabin, Ch, 20 85 'Do you know who made you?' 'Nobody, as I knows onrl said the inlO, Vopsylwith a shirrt laugh . . . 'i tspectI grofd. Dodt Ib think nobodj'iever mademe.' SUCKLING' Sir John' 16Ul-1&2 86 Out upon it, I have loved Three whole days together; And am like to love three more, If it prove fair weather.
A Poemwith tlrc ,4nwer
SLIETONIUS, 75?-150?A.D. Augusttu,25 87 Festirtalente,Hasten slowly. thoseabout EmPeror' Hail, 88 Ave, Imperator,morituri te salutanf. Claudius,2I to die s:aluteyou. SURTEES, Robert Smith, 1803-1864 89 The only infallible nrle we know is, that the man who is always talking ibout being a gentlemannever is one. Ask Mamma, ch, I 50 Ch, Cross, llandley 90 Hellish dark, and smells of cheesel
381
Swift
'oss,my_y{9, and % Threethlngs f neverlends- my Ty name. Hillingdon HalI, Ch, 33 92 Womenneverlook so well as when one comesin wet and dirty Mr Sponge'sSportingTour, Ch. 2l from hunting. 93 He was a gentlemanwho was generally spoken of T h"oqg Ib, Ch. 24 nothing a-yea4 paid quarterly. his horse. and rider a between that as close so 94 Thereis no secret Ib, ch, 3I SlryIFT, Jonathan, 1667-1745 and ligtt! A 95 The two noblestof things, which aresweetnes_s TheBattle of the Books,Preface 96'Tis an old maxim in the schools, That flattery'sthe food of fools; Yet now and tben your men of wit Cadenusand Vanessa \ryil condescendto take a bit. 97 Yet maliceneverwas his aim; He lash'd the vice, but sparedthe name; No individual could resent, On the Death of Wherethousandsequal$ were meant. Dr Swrft, StZ 9g He put this engqelawatclilto otrr ears,whichmadean incessant noije fike that6f a water-mill; andweconjectureitis either some s. Gulliver's Trtrvels, nnkno*" u"imal, or the god that he woT,s!'tip Yoiage to LillPut, Ch. 2 Ib, Ch,4 99 Big-endiansand small'endians. most the I f cannot but concludethe bulk of yoru nativesto be suffered ever nature that veniin nerniciousrace of little odious to ouwl upon the surfaceof the earth. - Ib, Yoyageto Brobdingnag,Ch.6 2 Whoevercould make two ears of corn or two blades of grass to srow upotr a spot of ground where only one gfgw before bes6*J Gtter of nr?ntind and do m6re essentialservice ft;il to his country than the whole race of politicians Put ,?F'$;it' of a styla 3 proper wordsin properplacespake the true definition g 1720 fan. clergynanr young a to ictter 4 Hail fellow, well met, All dirty and wet; Find out, if you.can' My Ladf s l-antentation IVho's -hrtdt, wno'i rlan.
Swift
382
5 So, naturalistsobserve,a flea Hath smallerfleasthat on him prey, And thesehavesmallerfleasto bite'em, And so proceedad infnitum, On Poetrfi 337 6 Promisesand pie+rust are madeto be broken. Polite Conversation,I 7 The sight of you is good for soreeyes. Ib 8 What though his head be emptl, provided his common-place book be full , A Tale af a Tub, D$ressionin Praiseof
g Wehave justenough religion to makeushate,butr"r.ff;ffx
make us love one another. Thoughtson YariousSu6jects I0 Few are qualifiedto shinOin company;but it is in most men's power to be agreeable. Ib t I A nice man is a man of nastyideas. Ib - Whereburnine 12 Ubi saevAindiqnatioulteriuscor lacerareneguit ' indignation n6 longer lacerateshis heart. Swift'sEpitop-h 13 I shall be like that tree; I shall die at the top. Attributed
14GoodGod!wharagenius I had Y;+;t:iiH],roiif;uned
SM, Algernon Charles, 1837-190!l 15 \ilhen the hounds of spring are on winter's traces, The mother of months in meadowor plain Fills the shadowsand windy places With lisp of leavesand ripple of rain, Atahnta fu, Calydon 16 Before the beginningof years There came to the making of man Time, with a gift of tears, Griefl, with a glassthat ran. Ib 17 Shall f strew on theerose or rue or laurel, Brother, on this that was the veil of thee? Ave Atque YaIe 18 Coul_dyou hurt ffio, sweetfips, though I hurt you? Men touch them, and changein a trice The lilies and lanzuors of virtue Dolores For the raptfres and rosesof vice. 19 f am tired of tearsand laughter, And men that laugh and weep; Of what may come heieafter For meh that sow to reap. nte Garfun af Proserpttn
383
Tac{hs
20 From too muchlove of living, From hope and fear set free, We thank with brief thanksgiving Whatever gods may be That no life lives for ever; That dead men rise uP never; That even the weariest river Winds somewhere safe to sea. The Garden af Proserpine 2l Glory to Man in the Highest ! for Man is the master of things. Hymn of Man
22 I havelived long enough,having seenone thing, that love hath an end; Goddessand maidenand gueen,be nsar me now and befriend. I{ymn to Proserpine 23 Laurel is greenfor a season,and love is sweetfor a day; _ _ But love growsbitter with treason,otrdlaurel outlivesnot May_. Ib 24 Riseere the dawnbe risen; Come,and be all soulsfeo; From field and streetand prison Come,for the feast.is spread; Live, for the truth is livingl wake, for night is dead. A Marching Song 25 I will go back to the great sweetmother' Mother and lover of men, the sea. I will go down to her, I and no othrcqr Closewith her, kissher and mix her with ma T'IETriurnph of Time $[NGE, John Mittington, Inbl9(D 26 When I was writing 'The Shadowof the Qled I ggt-more aid than any learningiould have given me from a chinlc in the floor of ihe otd Wicktow housewhereI was staying,that let mo
ueingdj';t what was hear #; Wtrtffil,##:,EW*
TACI'rUS, 55?417?A.D. - They qppellant, pacem 27 (fbi solitudinemfaciunt ' createdesolation '' ' .4gricola,30 and.call it peac'e. 8 Propriumhumaniingenitest odissequemlaeseris. It is human Ib nattneto hatethe fian whomyou Lavehurt.
Tatleyranal
384
TALTEYRAND, Ctarles l\flaurice de, 175#1838 delafin - ft is the beginningof the end. 29 Cest Ie comtmencement Rerwrk to Napoleon,I8I3 30 Noir commeIe diable, Clnud commel'enfer, Pur commeun ange, Doux commeI'amour. Black as the devil, Hot as hell, Pure as an angel, Reclpefor coffee Sweetas love. 31 IIs n'ont rien appris,nl rien oubli4,- They have learnt notlingrAttributed and forgotten nothing. 32 I^a parole a Ct€ donnded l'hommepour ddguisersa pensde.Speechwas given to rnan to disguisehis thoughts. Attributed Attributed 33 Pas trop de zCIe.- Not too much zeal.
a thingto beleft to mili%trfrted 34 \Maris muchtoo serious TAT$ Nahm, 1652-1715 35 lVhile shepherdswatchedtheh flocks by ntght, AII seatedon the ground, The Angel of the Lord came doual And glory shonearound. 'Feat notr' said he, for mighty dread Had seizedtheir troubled mind; 'Glad tidings of greatjoy I bring v W-hileShepherdsWatched To you andaU niankiid-', TAYIOR, Jane, l7g34ffil 36 Ti4'inkle,twinkle, little star, How I wonder what you arel Up abovethe world so high, Like a diamond in the skt
ITte Star
TEI\NYSON, Alfred, lst Baron, 1809-1892 37 O for the touch of a vanish'd hand, Break, Break, Break And the sound of a voice that is still I 38 A happy bridesmaidmakesa happy bride. f'he Bridcstruid,4 39 For men may corneand men may go TIreBrookr SS But I go on for ever.
38s
Tery;m
40 Hatf a league,half a league, Half a leagueonward, All in the valley of Death Rode the iix nundred. Ike Chargeof the Light Brigafu, I 'Forward the Light Brigadet' 4l 'Was Ib, 2 there a man dismay'd? 42 T\eir's not to make reply, lheir's not to reasonwhn Ib, 2 Their's but to do and die, 43 Into the iaws of Death Ib, 3 Into the hrouth of Hell , star' evening and 44 Sunset And one cleaf call for me! And may there be no moaning of the bar Crossingtlre fu? \Mhi:nI put out to sea. 45 The spacioustimes of great Elizabeth A Dream of Fair WomenrT Witn soundsthat EcnostilI. 46 A dauglrterof the gods,divinely tall' lb,87 And most divinely fair. hands; crooked with the srag 47 He clasps Closeto the sun in lonelYlands, Ringd with the arLrrew5rld,he stands. The urinkted seabeneathhim crawls; He watchesfrom his mountain walls, Thefugle And like a thunderbolt he falls. 4S God madethe woman for the marL And for the good and increaseof the world. Mwtn Monis, 43 Godiva,53 49 Then sherode forth, clothed on with chastity. 50 His honour rooted in dishonourstood, And faith unfaithfut kept him falsely r true. -Idylls.ot!ry K!g: Loncelot'andElatne, 871 Ib, 1082 51 He makesno friend who nevermade a foe. 52 For men at most differ as Heavenand Earth' Ib, Melliry But women,worst and best,as Heavenand Hell. and YivienrSl2 The daysdarkenround ffio, and the.yearc, , 53 Among new men, strangefaces,other minds' Ib,-Tlu lassif7 of Arthur, 405 bargel the from And slowly answer'dArthrrr 54 '13,eold order-changeth,yielding Plaq to neq Ibr 407 And God fulfils hinfief ii many-Says.'
Tenrycon
386
55 Fuy fgr ry soql. More things - are wrought e by prayer Ttra:nthis iorld dreamsof. iayuioy the King, T'hePassingof Arthar, 475 56 Our little systemshave their duy; They have their day and ceaseto be. In Memoriam A,H,E[,,Prolague 57 Men may rise on stepping-stones Of their dead selvesto higher-things. Ib, I For words, like Nature, half revea! 58 And half concealthe Soul within. Ibr S 59 I hold it true, whate'er befall; I feel it, when I sorrow most; 'Tis better to haveloved and lost Than never to bave loved at all, Ib, 27 60 Be neatrme when my tight is low, When the blood creeps,and the nervesprick And tingle; and the t[eart is sick, And all the wheelsof Being slow. Ibr SA 6l Oh y9t we trust that somehowgood Will be the final goal of ill. Ibr 54 62 Are God and Nature then at strife That Nature lends such evil dreans? So careful of the Erpesheseems, So carelessof the singtb'life. Ibr 55 63 Nature, red in tooth and cliaw, Ibr 56 Fresh from brawling courts & Ibr 89 And dusty purlieus of tfc liary. There lives morc faith in honest doubt, 65 Believerre, than in half the creeds. Ibr 96 Ib,97 66 He seemsso neaf,and yet so far, Ib, 106 67 Ring out, wild bells, to the wild s$r. 68 Ring out the old, ring in the new, Ring, happy Btlt, acrossthe snow: The year is going, let him go; Ib, 106 Ring out the false, ring in the true. out a slowly dying cause, 69 Ring-And ancient formgof party strife; Ring in the nobler modesof life, Ib, 106 With sweetermannerrr purer lartrs. Ring out the thousand wars of old, 70 Ib, 106 Ring in the thousandyears of 1rcace.
387
Tennyson
7l Ring in the valiant man and free, The larger heart, the kindlier hand; Rine-out the darknessof the land, In MetnorlamA,H,H, 106 Ring in [he Christ that is to be. 72 And thus he bore without abuse The grand old name of gentleman, Defamedby everycharlatan, Ib, ITI And soil'd with all ignoblellse. One Godnone laq one element, 73 And one far-off divine event, Ib, 131 To which the whole creation moves. than coronets, more 74 Kind heartsare Indy Clara l/ere - And simple faith than Nonnan blood. de Yere 75 On either sidethe river lie Lone fields of barleYand of rye, Thaiclothe the wotlt and meti'tthe *y; And thro' the field the road runs bY ' T'hehdy of Slnlott, I To many-tower'dCamelot. 76 Wiflows whiten' aspensquiver, Ib Little brggznsdusk anCshiver'The curseis comeuPon rlgr'sried 77 Ib, 3 The Lady of ShilotL 'tis early yetas whilo 78 Cornrades,leave me here a little, PoT: Leaveme here, and when you r --- want ltrer' sound upon meiguglt IicksleY Hal-t,I horn. of 7g [athe Spring a young ' Ughtly turns to thouehts v man's fancy '
v
r
lovg.
Ib'20
80 For I dipt into the future, far as human eyecould see' Sawthe'Vision of the world, and all the wonder that would be. Ib, I 16 were battle.flags the 8l Till the war-drum throbb'd no longer, and ftrfd In the Parliament of man, the Federation of the world. Ib, 127 Ib, L4I 82 Knowledgecomes,but wisdom lingers.
83 Womanis the lesserman, and alt thy passions,match'dwith mine Ar€ asmoonlightunto suntight,andaswaterunto wine, Ib, I5I 84
They carneupon a land In whicti it seemeftalwaysafternoon'
Thehtos-Eaters
Tennycon
38E
85 Music that gentlier on the spirit lies, Than tir'd eyelidsupon tir'd eyes.
TheLotos Edrs
86 Come into the gardennMaud, For the black bat, night, has flown, Come into the garden,Maud, I am here at the gate alone.
Maud, Part I, 22
87 There has fallen a splendidtear From the passion-flowerat the gate. Sheis coming, my do./e,my dear; Sheis coming, my life, my fate. Ib, 22 'twere possible 88 O that After long grief and pain To find the arms of my true love Ib, Part 2, 1 Round me onceagainl 89 You must wake and call me early,call me early,mother dear. TIreMoy Queen 90 For I'm to be Queenof the May. Ib Merlin and the Gleam 9l Follow the Glearn. Ode on tln Death of tla 92 The last great Englishmanis low. Dttke of Welltngion,3 93 O fall'n at length that tower of strength Ib Which stood four-squareto all the winds that blewl rough island-story, twice in our 94 Not once or Ib, I The path of duty was the way to gloqy. 95 With prudesfor proctors, dowagersfor deans, TItePrincess, And sweetgirl-graduatesin their goldenhaia Prologue,I4I 96 Sweetand low, sweetand low, Ibr 3, Sory Wind of the WesternSea. 97 The splendourfalls on castlewalls Ibr 4, Sory And snowysummitsold in story. 98 BIow, bugle, blow, set the wild echoesflying, Ib Blow, bugle; answer,echoes,dying, dying, dying. 99 Tears,idle tears,I know not what they mean, Ib,znd Sorg Tears from the depth of somedivine despair. I Man is the hunter; woman is his game: The sleek and shining creattrresof the chase' \Me hunt them for the beauty of their skins.
Ibr 5, 147
389
ltomg
2 Man for the field and woman for the hearth: Man for the sword and for the needleshe: Man with the headand woman with the heart: Man to commandand womanto obey: 2nd Song,5r 427 ThePrincess, Pri All elseconfusion. Att 3 My- strengthis as the slrength of ten, Sir Galalwd Becausemy heart is pure. TERENCE, 190?-159?B.C. Andria, 126 4 Hinc illae lacrirtae.- Hence thesetears. are the 5 Arnantium irae amoris integratio est,- Lovers' quarrels r Ib, sss renewalof love. 6 Fortis forturw adiuvnt, Fortune favoursthe brave. Phormio, 203 oPryols: many many men, so 7 Quot hominestot sententiae. So Ib, 454 TIIACKERAY' lVilliam l\fiakepeacer1811-1863 8 It is impossible,in our condition of society,not to be sornetimes TIteBook of Snobs,Ch. 3 a Snob-. 'Tis hard, -Master Harry : thafs so dyiog faith for a the not 9 everyman of ever! nation has donethat -'tis theltqlg yPi.o i! thafis difficult. ilcrnno sTEBLElIenry Esmond,Bk, I, Ch. 6 10 'Tis strange - what a man may do, and a woman yet think him an Ib, Ch.7 angel. gentlemen" for by gentlemen is written Gazette t 1 The Pall Mall Pendennis,Ch, 32 12 Awoman with fair opportunitiesand without a positive hump, Yaiity Fair, Ch.-4 may maxry whom shi iikes. 13 Wheneverhe met a greatman he grovelledbeforehim and my: lorded him as only a"free-bornEnftishmancan do. Ib, Ch. i3 Ib, Clt, 2I 14 Them's my sentiments. FREDBULLocK a_year, thousan{ 15 I think I could be a good womanif I had five BEcKYsHARP Ib, Ch"36 THOMA,SI Brandon,1857-1914 16 I'm Charley'saunt from Brazil, wherethe nuts come from, AUNI,ACTI LORDrAI.I@URTBABERIJYCT'n'IUT'S
Itomas TIIOMA,S, bylan, lgI+tSSg 17 And death shall have no dominion, Dead men naked thev shall be ons With the man in the winA and the west moon. And Deathslnll luve no Dominion 18 Do not go gentleinto that good night, Old age should burn and rave at clbseof ey; Rage, rage, against the dyiog of the light. Do rnt go gentle into tlnt good nght T> The foree thai tirrough the greenfuse drives ihe fiower Drivesmy greenage. TheForce that throaghthegreen Fusedrivesthe Flower 20 The hand that signedthe treaty bred a fever, And famine gre% and locustscame; Great is the hand that holds dominion over Man by a scribbledname. TheHand tltat SignedthePaper 2l Light breakswhereno sun shines; \Mhereno searuns, the waters of the heart Push in their tides. LSht Breakswhereno Sun Shines 22 After the first death, there is no other, A Rtfrsal to Moarn the Death, by Ft're,of a Child ln London 23 Iq is gpring, moonless night in the small town, starlessand bible-black. nRsr vorcg andcr Milk Wood 24 It is night neddying among the snuggeriesof babies. nRsr vorcts Ib 25 You're thinking, you're no better thanyou should be, Polln and -thing, tlat's good enough for me. Oh, isilt life a terrible thank God? Por,r.yGARTBR Ib 26 Praisethe Iordl We are a musicalnation. RBv.Err JENKTNs Ib 27 Organ Morgan, you havedt beenlistening to a word I said. It's organ organ all the time with you. MRsoRGAr{MoRcAhr Ib tfl
THOMPSON, trhancirs,1859-1907 28 For the field is ftrtl of shadesas f near the shadowycoast, And a ghostly batsmanplays to the bowling of a ghost; And I look through my tears on a soundless-clapping ] ' Y host As the riln-st6alersflicker to and fro, To and fro: O my Hornby and my Barlow long agol At Lord's 29 Nothing begins,and nothing ends, That is not paid with nnoan; For we are born'in other's pah, Daisy And perish in otn own"
391
Itueer
30 I fled Hh, down the nights and down the days; TIB Hound of I fied Him, down the archesof the years. Heaven 31 'Tis ye, 'tis your estrang0dfaces, TTteKingdomof God That miss the many-splendour'dthing. To my Godchild 32 Look for me in the ntuseriesof Heaven. THOIISON, JamesrX7fi)-178 33 When Britain first, at Heaveds cotnmand, Arose from out the auuremain, This was the charter of the land, And guardian angel$sungthis strain: 'Rule, Britannia, nrle the waves; Alfred: A Masgue,Act 2, Britons neverwill be slayes"' Sceru5 34 An elegantsufficieocy,content, Retireient, rural quret,friendship, books, Easeand alternatelabour, useful life, fhe Seasons, Progressivevirtue, and approving lleavenl Spring, 116l THOMSON, Roy Herbert, lst Lord, 1894-1m6
o 35Itisassoo ;:,H;:|r,?,: ;::iHoi";f:,ffi ,r"r:#i#f{; in Great Britaini madeduri'ng'qr interfiew in Cansda TIIOREAU, Henry Davld, 1817-1862 36 The massof men leadlives of guiet desperation. Walden,konomy 37 Our tife is frittered awayby detail . " . Simplify, simplify. Walden,V4hereI Lived and WIwt I Lived For 38 The governmentof the world I live in was not framgd, like that of Biitain, in after-dinnerconversationsover the wine. Ib, Conclusion 39 It takestwo to speakthe tnrth - one to speak,and another to hear. A Weekon the Concordand Merrimack Rivers, WednesdaY 40 Not that the story needbe long, but it will take a long while to .;Intter make it short.
Thucydldes
392
THUCIpIDE$ c. {ll a s,'g l'oot ?9.t:49 $truts: that s" snd flet* his lronr 336:?S $tuttble; chiri .-" $h$!r"d like a s. land 3I3;5t
$tutrble {continued} hs lies in the s. t?:4?, StudiEq: s. serye for *leiight, fotr ornament 26:30 tcc rnuch time in s" ?6:31 Study: every Ja*k ... snust,s" r,heknack 149:50 his s. was but litei einthe bible 97:37 I am slow of s. 341:41 rnuch s" .r, weariness of the tlesh 47:13 proper s. 0f Mank in ciis Man 250:I 3 s. what you most affect 355:20 Stuff-: ambitio[ n." macie gi srernsf $a 3 2 5 :i 4 tisten all dal'to such s. 90:49 '$, and nonsense!' said Alics 91:68 E. of life to knit me 167:83 such s, as dreams arc mado on 35G7:50 written such votunresof s.l 194:59 Stumble: they s. that run fast 35427 Stupidity: confrrm'd in full s. l28l@ ncl sin except s, 4Q4:2 Sturm und Drang l9I:lB Stygian; in S. cave fcrrlorn 213-14:91, s. smoke of the pit 170;19 Style: Ie s, est l'homme 76:51 Style: s, is the man bimself 76:51 true definition of a g. 381:3 Subdue: it [forceJ rnay s, for a monnent 78:72 Subject: every s.'s duty ... soul 32S:53 load every rift of yr. s. 187:69 pCIetry.*,st&rtle,,. with its s. 186;54 ff, to the saruediseases 339:13 s. we old men are tqr ... Iying 3l7t2l this s" for heroi* song 220:90 Subjeets: my s. for a pair of can'e.d saints 350:55 poorest s. are at this hour asleep? 3 1 7 : 13 ,$'s&Jirere : du $. aw riclicule 3.! Ittt p$s 228:84 Sublirne: from the s. fo the rid.iculous 228:84 my cibject atr!s, 146;6 or* step above the s. 243;t9 s. ancl the ridiculc.us srs ,., related 343;l:i we safi rnake *ur lives s, lgS:9'I S'r:blimity: a $. tc we.iconaeme home t87:o3 Subrnil: King do narv? lvXustbe $.? 35 0 : 5 5 $o;bscrihers:he i"trns" baits hjs hosk 10S;84 x*t pxixrtinga"rtyiisi srf s" t??;33
s45 $nmmer tsontlmdeiil Substsacoof thlnglshored f,or 59:99 bud of tovo by E.nsriPestns breath Subttretyis better tbao forco 2?9:86 354:3 Succecd:lf at ffrst you don't s. 163:28 comparothee to a B''BdaY 3$2;32 thosevrho $e'er F. 121180 dry as s" dust, 409:64 nothing s.lik* sxc€ss '406:3tr Succeedsi *tema1s, gilds them 84:77 nothlng s. liko succ€ss ??3:1tr haunt of fi,ieson s* #Yss 184:28 $ucsess:s, snd miscarriagearg ospty H o{dy knoqv thet F" sarls tn ms scunds 172t43 2l0z47 s. is countedswectest t2t:80 tn thelr n. beauty kissnd 3521?9 this ecsta,sy,is s" tn life 244iW last rose of s. 226:63 to cornmands. 9;4 Iivo murmur of a s.'s daY 2ll40 to make a marriags a s. 293t'tr5 oa s. eYe$by hanoted stream 214:3 true s. i* to labour 380:80 one srsallow does not naka a 8. youffl lretigionl is S. 28:63 TI9t89 Sucked:I s, the blood 105:51 ahaU not s€a$o sn and wintr Sucker: a s. born every minuts 28:58 35:48 Sucks!my baby .., s. thg nurseasleep s" by this sun of York 351:64 300:?l s. his o'er-brimm'd n.. etammy celle wherethe bees,,theresuckI 357:56 181:79 Suddenstormsare sbort 348:40 s" has set In with .." sevffitY X0?81 Su+Jdenly:shall s. como to his temple s. is isume'trln 15:?t 5h99 g.'sleass,,.too short a dato 362:32 is thelast ... claim tr63:31 Sudetenland s.'s velvotbuds 318:39 Suer less used to s. thaa to command thinkins on fantastlc s.'s heat 348:3? 294296 thy eterual s. shatl not fade 362133 we were not born to s, 347:31 to .n.men that sou8lhthftqrsweet8s $' Suez:somewheroEast af Suez 190:8 323:87 Suffer:but doth s. a sea'changs355:35 warmed".. bf tho gamc,.' !" 339:!3 not s. a witcb to live 37:94 with lovo ln 3.'E woaderl,nad r. f,0trtho truth's sako &92 230-1:2Il s. me to como to thp &2274 Sumsit$: $rowy s otd io $torY 3889? s. tbs little c&ildr€o to come 54:61 $ua (cee also Smno): sll, cucspt tbfitr than one lnnocent s" 66t26 t.o fu gct W7'l ys s. foots gtadly .". ysursotvesff€ and I wil! slng of the r' 252248 wiso 58:64 at the golng dowu of tho s' 65:20 SufFerancslg ths bsdge of stl ottr trlbo bo,foret"borldng r. 399:39 338:6 betweenme and ths s. 122:85 SuffcrcdlLord IfiPBo g. fearfirl loss bir& sfo firlnt with tbe bat s. 185:42 32r3 canaot mske our s. stand stlll 206:96 tovE a placotho tcss for baving I' sloseto ths g"in tronslyt&nds 38514? 23274 dominions, on whlch t'ho r, nwer Sufferins: beans., nothing Srutrr. 23t74 eets 230:tB $uffEeioney: an elegant s,r content enrly-rising r. tas not atteined 39I:34 162:18 Sufficimt: !" concludons ftom ln' €ye,qare nothi$g UkEths s" 364:52 sufficieot Premises 822& fer frorn thg t- and *o*ner-galc 8, rmto tho daY ig thE eYil 52:22 I56:*{. $ugar; I must 8. Df,Yhair 9t:6{ follerw the fatrrs. $8:33 s, asd spic6and all thatesnics fr4&S$ fusnish'd *onby AJdcrshot r. $4;25 Sugge$t$; the wurd Ist€,ffiesiuet s' &Iqrryrlf the s"witr!be Sinnrns$ t?:4$ 3?:61 gc out in the middaYs" 11?143 Suit: silk s, **" f;sst rne muck fr$nry hgtfoBrititin atrltha s"? 3$.{:3S 245:41 f arti tos much in the s. 3e'!5;3S Sultsy: more $offifilslg whers the E dtr Elrb€ effeerY of tlle s. 33*?? climatenss. S4;66 f*st ss th* s. was risins !'6:8S Sunamer:s wind is s, t85134 lpts eclipsefl ta es s* $bS s30#ft aftsr $., merrilynmemilY SJTISS 3??;S3 *.1 en I t.ocdny *3?;6$
Sm Sun (eontinued| light .., dies with the dying 3, 69-70 Iight ... where no s. shines 390:21 love that moves the s. tl7:4 Ioves to live i' th' s. 301:85 make guilty ,.. the s, 327t53 make bay wbile the s. shines 271t27 Mother, give me the s, 169:10 never shall s, that morrow see 333:34 no new thing under the s. 46:96 now the s. is laid to sleep 178:50 seitasames, that shines 362:23 she grew in s. and shower 415:30 so when the s. in bed 216;22 s. breaks through the darkest clouds 355:25 , s. came up upon tbe left 104:44 s. climbs slow, how slowly 104:34 s, go down upon your wrath 58:71 s. shines upon all alike 279:87 S., stand thou still 38:20 s. that warltls you r.. shine on me 348:33 s. was shining on the sea 92:76 thank heavens, tho s. has gone in 374:4 the chambers of the s. 68:54 tte maturing s. 180:78 the rising of the s. lGlT:8T the s. is lost, and tht earth 123:l tbe s. of riebteousne$ ariso 51:l tho s. shall not smito theo 4{:38 this s. of York 351:64 to have enjoy'd tho g. 20:3l whirc founts ... ill the Courts of tho B. 99:70 with the setting s. droppcd from tho zenith 217:44 Sunday: golf rnay bo played on S, 194:52 here of a S. morning 167'82 killing ... tnouse on S. 70;74 shot througb, his heart on S. 379fl1 S. clears away the rust 9:7 Sunk: all s. beneath the wavo 113:64 $rrnlsss: down to a s. sea 106:71 Sunny Jimt they called him S. 157:@ Sunny pleasure-dome 107:75 Snnrise: in eternity's s. 66:34 Sunst blest by s. of homo 71t93 .Sunset: s. and evening star 385:40 B. tirDl one glorious blood-red 74:24 Sushine.: no g. but has somo shadow
tl3:2 tho g is a gloriousbirth 4ft274 Stry:who sippedDo8. 1,18.9:{6
Supercilious; a s. knowledge in accounts 37lz70 Superffuity of good things ll:21 Superfluous: in the poorest thing s. 328:67 Superior: revolt ... that they may be s, 20:27 Superiority: one shall acquiro an evident s. t7 5:96 Superstition is the religion of feeble minds 78:80 Superstitions: new truths ... orrd 8s s. 169:6 Supper: hope is .., a bad s. 26;38 sings for his s" 235:52 to s. with a flood of tears 119:39 Support: help the feebte .,. s. him after 357:59 Sure: his mercy is for ever s. 188:78 s. way to see it lost ,,, last ditch 79:90 Surfeit: feast .., where no crude s, reigns 213:77 Surfeit-swelled:so s,, so old 318:34 Surfeiting: give me excess ... that s. 358:75 Surfeits: the s, of our own behaviour 327..53 Surgery: honour hath no skill in s. 315:88 Surmise: with a wild s. 185:41 Surprise: poetry shd, s. by a fine excesg 186:55 Surprised by joy ... f turned 4lll9l Surrender: rrnconditional and immediate s. 153:15 we shall never s. 100-101:94 Survey: monarch of all I s. ll4t77 time that takes s. 315;91 Survival: g. of the fittest 117:8, 376:34 without victory there is no s. 100:93 Survive: but one ... Noah dare hope to s. 169:4 Suspects: man s, himself a fool 418:63 Suspension: willing s. of disbelief lO7:19 Suspicion: Caesar'g wife ... above g, 87:10 s. ... haunts tbe guilty mind 322:72 Suspicions amongst thoughts .,. bats amongst birds 26:23 Sussex: and the story of S, told 32:6 there shall the S. songs be sung 3*,6 Swagman: iolly s. sarnped by a billabong 2443A Swain: no better than a homely & 321:70 Swains: all our s. codrocnd her 361:8
&7 Swallow: hope "". fiie$ with a.ts wlngn 352:83 ono 8. does not make I 8ufrmor 279:89 $wallows: gatberinge' twitter 181:8? whitethroat buitds a.nd 811tbe & 74222 Swan: SweetS. of Avon 179:58 $waneoRibber: 'wsr dowu upon de S' 138:5 $wans: atl his geesears 3. '2&414 B6vens, &-swimmiflg 238:?3 a" sing beforetheYdia 106:70 $wap horsesin rnid-stream 196:80 $wat: Akond of $" 194:54 $way: mere,yis nbove this sccptreds" 339:15 regions *r thy Postsrity ehatr! s" 112:50 truth ... prevailed with doublE s. 150:6? $wear: s. ttts,Kate,Iike a tady 314;'16 vben very nngry s. 394t71 Sweat:blood, toi.lotearsand s" 100:92 in the 3. of thy faco 35:38 $one witl B. but fqr Promotion 300:?9 s. for duty not for meed 300179 Sweating: quietly 8. Pntq tc Palffi 169;5 $weats;Fatrstaffs, to death 313:59 $weeBoa, you fat snd greasycitizeng 300:?6 Swcet:* ladYe. and kind 18:9 and s" girl-gaduates 388:95 back to the great s. mother 383:25 bCIths. things '". &11e. thing$ 69;65 but tben, how it was e.l ?3120 by any other nsrno wd" sanell n^gB. 353;1 deseft'esnot the g. 260:69 eash op'ning 8* of esriiest bloom li)?:8? how s$ur s. musicisl 351:63 how $. ssd fair ahs se€nu to be 398:1? bow s" the moonligbt sleePs 34S:23 how s, their memorYstill It3:6? Iaw beyo$dits own s. will 4S3;88 trittlEs".n"kill muchbitterness 1S2;4
Sudk
$wect tcontinged) plar B. breathing Zephyrtw dtd 3771.46 f. is pleasureafter pairl !??:53 D" is rel'enge- ostrwially to worrcfit 84:68 s" Littlo ButtercuPI 14G7:20 e. singinein the cholr 16.1?:87 6. $tay-at-HCImers. Well-content t17zl2 s. Thamestrtrn softlY 377247 8. to took inta .,r faee of heat'en lS6:4? s. tCIteste".. i:tdigesticnsour 348135 nwinglow, s. chariot t8:8 the s. o' the ysar 361:1? to haves s' tooth 279:9L whenyou speak,s. 362:21 you'tl iook s. upon the seet 116:99 $weetand twenty: kiss ms, s. 359;84 $weet-briar:througb the s, ar t&e vine 214:91 $weeten:children s' Iabours 24:95 civet ,.. to s. ny imagination 329:93 perfumes of Arabi* wil'l nct s. 335:69 $weeter:anythfurgto me is s" 164;43 $. lnarrnersrpurer laws 386:S9 s. than the berrY l4t:5[ $wectest:tast taste $f $ileetsis r" Iagt 3'{8:39 s. 1i'1fetler 378:5S s, tbing that ever ggew 4ltr;86 $weetheartslold soldiers,s.r ar$ surest 4{S:5? Sw$ting: triP nCI f,urther' PrettY 8o 359;83 $weetlyficws tfrat liquefaction 16?:23 crutof the $tro{!BcarnsfoE't.h Sweetness: 8' 39:27 passian for s' and light 21:5? pursuit of s. and lieht 2"1,247 two xroblest things .!. $. and tight
381:95 waste i$s s" on the desert air X55:3? $we*tsl a$ the tast t*ste uf $"r is swe€testlast 348:39 perpetual'feast of nectared $' 213:?? stclen s" &re best l$?:t 3 s, and a ride in the trairr 211:5S $" tG the swset; farewell! 312:33 love is s. for a day 383:23 love i$ s., given er returned 369:44 $wept; if sevennnaids -'" s..it 93;?9 Swift: Catrsin $., ystl wI"3 aevsr bo g naug3rt so s. es MelancholY 8I *$ poet 138:67 reven$e i$ s. 276:89 tot> s" $*' a$ tardY $.s too als:vr ncssions cf s" silent thouglit 3S2:3? J54;10 slsep of, labr:uring man is s. 4S;3 stro*g*r thas Sssiftcr thau eegtes ntclsn waters ars $o 45;60 4G:48 liars s, ss Scva 384;30
Swfo
648
Swim: a naughty night to g ln 329:80 but said I cd. not E. 9l:61 Swine: nor yet feed ths s. 231-2,27 pearls before s. 52:24 8., women and beescannot bo turned 279292 Swing low, sweetchariot t8:8 Swoon: at twelve noontho nativesL ll2z42 Swoons: wearied band s. to a waltz 169:5 Swop for my dear old Dutch 99:80 Sword: a SiSbis the s. of an angplkrng
Taitr: and bring their t b€hbd thcm 234:48 cut off thetr t- with a carving knifo 240:80 &ogs and snails end puppydog,t' L Vl0:85 atingsin their t. 6l:29 t. like unto scorpions 61229 Tako: t. a farthing away 2lg:93 t. any man's horses 318:33 t. away my good namo 2ll9:95 Taken: wheo t. to bo well ghaken 108:95
66:35 believed he had a s. upstairs 417:51 his father's s. ... girded on 226:64 I Yrith s. will open 340:30 is the s. unsway'd ? 352:82 man for the s. 389:2 moro cruel tho pen ... than ... s. 8l:30 nor shall my s. sleep 67:38 nor the deputed s. 337:84 pen is mightier than tho s. 76:54 Swords: beat ... & into plowshares 48:31 with papcr han and wooden B. 395:81 Swore: Frankio and Johnny ... s. to be trus 16:81 Swound: like noises in a s. 105:46 Syllable: Iast 3. of reeorded time 336:76 $ymmetry: frane thy fearful s. 68:46 sprrilers of the s" of shelves 192t26 SYmPathiz.s; tho Walrus said: 'I
Takes3 a man who shaves and i" a iraio 402:77 blesseth ... hi.m that t. 339:15 Talcum: a bit of t" is atways walcum 229:94 Tale: a round unvarnish'd L 3*4:91 an honest t. speeds best 352:80 cd. ever hear by t. or history 341:36 cvery shepherd teils his t. 214:98 every t. condemns mg 353:86 every tongue brings in a ... t. 353:86 had wo lived, I shd. have had a t. 294291 f cd. a t, unfold 3A7:& It is a t. told by an idioi 336276 point a nooral, or adorn a t, 174269 sad t.'s best for winter 361:13 t. which holdeth children from plBy 327t4t tedious as a twice-told t. 327241 tlereby bangs a t. 301:88, 355:23 with a t. forsooth he cometh 373:86 yr. t., sir, wd. curs deafness 355:50 Talent: one t, which is death to hido 223t29 t. does what it can 209:37 t, of ffattering with delicaey 23:78 Talents: if you hav'e great t. 287:6 Tales: and tell old t", and laugh 330:99 dead men tell no t, 259257 natural fear ..6 increased with t. 24:86 tell t. out of scbool 279:4 Tatk: Cabots t. only to God 69:67 I dont want to t. gra$unar 366:94 I want to t, like a lady 366:94 make littls fishes t. ... t. like whates 152:4 some t. of Alexander 18:6 t, of censorious old men 94t3 t. of court aewg .r. t. with thcm 330:99 t. of many thingg 93:80 t. of the dsyil 279:6
deeply s,' 93:81 g. with ..o pgins .." IIot .". pleggure$ 169:1 $yrnpatby: without feeling or exciting s. 173:66 $ystem l energies of our E. will decay 27:48 Systen:s: our little s" have their day 386;56 Ta-ra-ra-boom-de-ay 294:84 Table: cnumbs ... fronn the rich mautg t. 55:86 Tables: to tum tbe t. 281:69 lfabor: as to the t.'s sound 410:75 Tail.: better .., than tbe t. of a lion 255:20 be's treading on my t. 9l:62 inaprove his shinrng t. 89;45 strng is in the t. 278t?8 guch a little t" behind 3l:89 tbereby hangs a t" 345:4
s49 Tatk {eontlnued) t, s a t" 316:96 ?^itles: conqrlering kings tiieir L gnk* 95:18
s56 Titles tc*nttnal'ed} ttly oth€r t. ... glvefr s$ray 328;56 Titwillow, titw[llowl !46;ll T;:ad: I bad rather be e t, 345;8 ietelligent S{r T" 153:tr4 L, uSIy and vea*m$us 3S*?5 Taastr let the t. Bassodrink to tbe tass 372:?S Todayl be wise t. 418:61 c*n cail t, hls 6wn 138:?tr hcur t* i$ wcrth trwo tomornaw 267:4 lf, T, bc ssfc€t t 35:?4 never jam L 93;83 snc t, is won'th two ts-noorrows 280:42 snch n day tomorrow ns t. 3S1:12 Toddlc safety home and die-"in bed 293:82 To*; carch a nig8pr by b.is t. 232:29 on the fisbt fantastic t. 214;94 Toes: bells on her t 237:66 nobody knows .*. hsw* gold my t2t0:49 Together: let us nsver visit t" 109;1? let us remain L stiil 368:27 put flumpty t. again 233:37 t. in a littte crooked house 239:74 t. now for forty years 99:80 Toilr each anxious t., sach eager strifo 1?3:67 Iet not arnbition mock "", usefut t, 155:34 offer o.8 btood, t,, tesrs $rd sweat t00:92 steep after t, 377t42 they t. notn neither .", spin 52221 t", envy, want, the petrsn 1?3:68 Told: t. me you had been to hEr 91:67 w€nt and L the sextos 165:59 Tolerahle and nct tq bo endured 343;7$ Tolcrance: pr&ctisa t. ... livs,". in peacs 39,4r?S "f*ier"ate; rr$ longer t" th* racs 37:48 TolX: t, fcr-rtjle braee I l3:64 t. me bnck frorn theo to e.c SgSf !S4:3i Thiledi sextsu t, the hel $S:S$ Toll,s I fur wham the tr'eil t. l'fu1;14 it t, fbr thse l?4:14 Tcm: 'Corne* comes' said T,ts fat^fu*r J36:$5 p*c:rr T. 's g'*:cld 329;I 1 T. h*ars ltrgs lnte"rthe hall 33?:X{}' T.n ir* wa.$& pigxr's s*n 2,1*:82 $ss! ?4$:83 ?".* T"$ the, pigrcr"ua
657 Tom (contlnrcA T. went howling down tbo street 2.40..83 Tom o' Bedlan: a sie[ like T. 327254 Tom Pearsc, lend Ee yr, grcy marg 19z12 Tomb: for such a t. wd. wish to d,io 216z?5 monunent without a t. 179:54 Tommy: it's T. this, sn' T. that 190:tl little T, Stout 232:28 little T. Ttrcker 235;52 a little t. sang 'Willow' Tom-tit: l46z12 Tomorrow: can sayr T. do thy worst l28z7l egg toda! ... ben t. 255:13 hour today is wortb two t. 267:1 never put ofr till t. 273:85 sarno Oower .o. t. witl bo dying 162'.24 ruch a day t. as today 36lz12 think today and speak t. 28O:26 L and t. crceps in this petty paco 3t&76 L blossoms ..r bean hil blushing houours 322:80 L is a new day 28O:44 L is obr wedding day 113:5t t. never comes 280:43 t we'll bo cober 16:?8 T. I may bo 135:69 T.t-Why, unborn T. and dcad YeeterdaY l3S:74 Tomorrovs: one today is vorth two L ?8&,42 Tone: tako the t. of tho oompany 98:57 tbat t. and gesture btand 294t96 Tongs: thc t. and tbe boncs 342:5t touch him with a pair of t. 28ft51 but no t. Tongrrc; an un&rstaffliagn 30&5t breast, forger .r. t, must vent 303.-f:l? custonu, politics and L 245:32 GvGryL bringp in a ,.. talo 353:86 €1le,t., sword 3t0:l fellows sf infinitc t. 321:61 gvc thy thoughB oo L 306:55 34255 iron t. of midnisbt kcep oa€'g t. between oug't t€eth 268.zF lcp wd thy t. .n. kccp thy frocnd 97249 no vcnom to tbat of thc t. ?f,291 one t. is cnougb for a wosan 280:45 our EnSlhh L r gELlimanfu 377:48
Topces
Tongue (contlnued) sad words of t. or peo 403:90 sharp t. ... edged toot .,. growg keener l7O:17 thougb his t. dropped manna 217:48 t. can no man tame 60:5 L cleave to ,.. roof of my moutb 4..49 t. is not steel .., it cuts 280:46 t. of idle people 28O247 t. sounds ... BEa sullen betl tl6:Tl t. that Shakespearespake 413:5 use of my oracular t, 372:71 virtue dwells not in the t. 282:93 Tongues: conscienco ... thousand several L 353:86 dono to death by gtandsrow t. 344:88 finds t. in trees 300:75 lack t. to praise 363:46 silver-swcct ... lovcrs' t. by nigbt 354:5 these poor t. ... shall be silent 196'.76 Toniebt: along the Potomac L 30:84 t. we'll mcrry be 16:78 Too: this t.' t. solid flesh 305:42 L nicc ... t proud ... Gool ... fo[d
151:?9 T o o l : m a n f u a t . - E a k i t r g aninnt 139:17 sbarp tonguo ... edged L ... grows kceapr l?ft17 Tpols: bad workman guarrels witb hls t, 255:88 grvo ur tbc L ... fiqish tbo iob t0l;98 t. to work 1.. for thoso who wilt 2W|22 Tooth: a t, for a t- 52212 Nature, red in t. and claw 386:63 sharper than a s€rpent's t" 328:5E t. to t., hand for hand 3?:93 to have a swect t. 279291 thy t. is not so kecn 3A29l Tootbache: cndrrro the L patimtlY 344:86 Top: always room at tbe t. 400:46 I sbalt die at the t. 382;13 glcep like a t" I l7:9 t. of it reacbed to heaven 36:61 T. People take Tlw Times ll:33 Topical: sang a most t. song 13:53 Topics : high Liifs ... otber fashionableL 152;1 32J;.77 Tops: mouutain t. &at frtrlrs t. were close against the skY 165:61 bsxcs without L Topses: herring 225tfi
T'opsy
658
Tcpsy: persisted T.o tnever had no father' 380:84 T'orch: a bright to snd & c&srment 185:33 t* c.r passed to a new gen*ration 188:?4 Torehes: doth teach tbe t" to burn bright 353:94 llories own no argument but f,orce 7?:8 Torment: love in s palace ."" grievoils t. 183:11 there shatl no t. touctr tlrem 62z43 Tqirrucnis; sirr'r. $,t uta) r!6 beecme our el*ments 217;31 Torn: rnan ali tattered and t" ?39:79 Tontoise: why did ysr"i call hirn T"? 9I;59 Tcsture; t,ouch hiru sst and t" not, ngain 36?:i 6 T'crry sr' vqtith rnore propriety *.k tb.e Ccnservaeivs I 15:87 Tossed I ysu t. und gorett eeve,rat person$ 175;9? Tossing their heEds in eprightly danee 410;69 T*tter: charming ts t* ints vosxrs 398:2? Totters; tle state t. 356:45 ;l[ouch: rrr€rr t" tbem end chango 382:18 S f,or ths t, sf a vanish,'d hand 384;37 one t" cf nature 358:?2 tbat I misht t" thnt c"treek *53:9S t. him with a pair of tongs 280:5[ t, sot, ta$te not, hsedle not 59;8L 8* wood ?S{}:52 unkind ns €&e t. of sweatlng rretnl I tr7:!4 Touching: e eig&t sdi t. in iLt maJestff 4lzt96 ?ioujours gaf archSr 3$Slfi4 Fa&.spour angufi pour fos$ 129:?4 '{oat p€sse, f" c*$se, t, lasse 2Sl:53 'X'ovesr the slithy t, 9l:69 T*wer: fall'n, rO, thet tn of sfrength 388:93 King's rr&sq is & t slf str€sgih 353184 to the d&rk t" cemas 32$;8? yander irry-ma:rtled t, tSSr3* Towers: burnt the tugl€s$ t, $f llitlff ? ?04:63 c#au{i-.oeppodtntr"uoSq}rfrffislrspain*ex 356t5$ T'crwr:: a tsveffl Lqrtb* t. 19:tS in Sc*rI*t [,,0wliff's X w;re L*m 1?:36
ontinuedj Torvn (^e King sits in Dunfermline €, 12:37 lived in a pretty how t, tl6:94 O little t. of Bethlehern 72:95 spring, moonless night *€ smgll t* 390;?3 t. .*ois lighter than vanity 77:60 T.:wn-crier: as lief ttre t. spoke 310:3 Toy; foolish tbing was but a t. 360:3 I c,ountreligion ".. childish t" 20a:69 Tcrys: all is but t. 334:46 Trac+: Iearned to t. the day's disastere 150:68 Tracc's; h#unds of spring gr+ +n winter'$ t- 382:t5 T'rade: and nstsr th*r* isn't any t. t5t:8 every t, save *ensure S5:*S balf a t, and half'an art 1?0:12 homety, sligbted, shepherd'g L 215:11 no na.tion was eyer ruined by t" 138:t I others .,. ventrlre t" atrr*nC 318:39 where tbe old t.'s plying 230:12 Tr:sdesmen: bowa y€ t,n bow, ye ma. ses 14318S tying *.. bec$ffi,esnsne but t, 362:26 ?radition: t. eppro..res all fornrs of csmpet-ition ]03;3$ youth of Ameri.ca n.noldest t, 406:26 Treduced: beat a Venetian and t. ths sr&re 346-?:?? Trnfatgar $quare fouutains liko 6sv* srn$lent fflerks 2S5:?S Trafiic: tbe tlvo hcurs't" sf otrr s[nge 353:89 Traeedties: sll t" are Saished by n deEtb S4l?S fhere are tws t. in lif* 365:83 ?rsgedy: gs litel Eq1'at. 98:52 t is ."* & seffi€y$ stori$ gTz4T world 6!r & t* ts tJrosa wfuo f€ei 398:23 t"-ecmlesl-hlsts* Tragical-historieet, ricd* 3S8;S4 ?rail; [ong, long t, &-s/indins 189;Sd 'Frain; & xlrnrl whs shavm rssldtekes e L d42:77 something . not* r'ead in tke t 405; i 4 Treisr"band: s *.. captaire eke was he x,1ft$4 Tr-ai::rrrg iv ever5€hfuig 394:6$ Traitor: tfrsu art e t" Sft si*r bie beadl 3$?;?5 ?.*rait$rs: e*wards Sincfun estd t- $**r 1$**trg.rg transl,at*rxu 8" *$l;54
659 Tram: not evena bus,but a t. 158:68 Traucluillity: dismiss it with frigid, t, !72:43 emotion recollectedin t. 416'.42 t. t thou betternanxo 107:78 Translated:Botiomt.,. thou art t, 342:49 Translators,traitors 281:54 Transport: I turncd to share the t. 4tI:9L Trapeze:daring young tnan on .,. t" | 19627 Trappingsandthe suitsof wos 305:41 Trash; who stealsmy purse stealst, 345:6 Travel: doesnot t, to seeEnglishnaen 379r65 fartherfronr the esstmustt. 411:73 f nevert, ryithout my diarY 405:t.4 I t. light ... os a man cant. 140:31 to t, hopefully is x better thing 380:80 t. ..o part of education .., of gxperienco 25212 Travelled: I t. among unknown tnetr 409:66 much haveI t, 185:40 Traveller: a t,, b! the faithful hound 198:94 a t. camoby 67.41 a t. from an antique land 369:39 'anybody there?' said the T. 118:23 from whose bourne no L returns 3@:95 Travellers: t. must be content 300f1 t. ne'er did lie 356:48 Travelling: all t. becomegfull 291t59 Travels: fool wanders,tho rrise man t. 263:81 t. far, knows much 281:55 Treachery: kit,gs that fear..o t.? 322:71 Treacle: cloying t. to tho wings of independencs 187:66 Tread: fiend doth closebehind him t. 106:60 Treading on my tail 91262 Treason: during his officel t. \ttls rro crlmo 126:46 gunpowdert. and plot 15:69 if it prosper, nono daro call it t. 158:70 last temptation ... greatestL t32tl7 tovs grows bitter with t. 383:23 pay givento n..hireling for t' 172:50 t. doth DeY€rprosper 158:70 Treasons: fit for t., stratagems aod qpils W2A
Tre.mblers
Treasure: Bacchus' Blessinssaro a L 127:53 justice, counsel,and t. 25'.7 preserveit as yr. chiefestt. 3l:88 privilege ... rilg t. beyond measurg L43:76 purestt" neortattlmesafford 347:30 rich thet., sweetthe pleasure t27:53 Treat: scnaethingleft to t. my friends 203:59 Treaty:handthat signedthg t. 390:20 Treble: turning againtoward childish t" 301:90 sat Tree: and on tho T. of Life 219:64 as the twig is bent the t,'g inclined 231:22 bark up the wrong t. 255:94 billboard lovely as a t. 229:9? ever-gre€trt. of diabolical k!ow. ledgo 371:68 '69:60 fool Gesnot tbs samst. forbidden tn, whoss mortal tastE 216:27 I had a little nut L 233239 I shall be like that t. 382:13 I'll nevgr seoa t. at all 229:97 middls t. and higFestthres 219264 on a t. by a river l46tl2 only God can make a t. 189;82 poem lovely as I t. 188:81 ronnd the etm-L bole 74221 this t. continuesto be 191:20 t. is knowrr by its fruit 28t:57 under tho greeawoodt. 300:83 Trees: atl the t. wers bread and cheeso 15:55 amid their talt ance.stralt. 160;9 and all ths t. are green 189:88 besido ths lake' beneath the t. 4fi267 birds ... hide in cooling t. 185:42 climbing t. ... they do best 210:51 finds tongues in t. 30075 great t. ,.. nothing but shade my apple t. will never ... 9ot procreate like t. 72zS
265:45 t39:26
seethe wood for the t. 277:23 straight t. havo crooked roots the fir t. dark and high 165:61 t. ... bow thennselveswhen he did sing 322277 t. whereyou sit 251:32 vrith rocks, and stones,and t. 4l4t'19 Trelawny: snd shall T. die? 158:74 Tremblers: boding t. learned to traco 150:68
Itesffi
660
T'FesFcs:fair tn Es&nrgo*" rihf€ lnsnare 351:3$ witlrtr'd ehec&and L grqf 795:99 Triat by Jwy ,,. lnstsad of being a eecurity 119:?S Tribe: tradgsof all our t" 338:6 Idcls of the T; 2724t peart.,r riehnr ttlse ell hls t" 346-7:22 Tribes: tws mighty t.r ths s,orcssnd Bored 85:86 Tribute: to his fset thy t. bring 201:34 frick! a t" worth two of th,st 313:55 t. cf our English nation 31&t wben in doubtowlrl thc t, 168:$? when the long L'a over 2CI8:16 Tricks: fant"astict" beforo b&fi hearuc 337:87 frustrate tbeir knavlsb t" 38;30 hard to teach sn old dog t. tl9:I2 Trld.ent: ffatter Ne$tlrne for hls t. 303:1? Tried to lirc witloet hlm ,.. dieS 416:47 Triffe; as 'twur? a caretesst. 333:30 one must not t witb love 227tT) Triffex: mgu of gense,notn ".. hum,ourg ,.. flattcr! 98:50 snapper*up of unconddcred & 361:18 Trip no further, pretty ewctfrne 359:83 Tripptne hitbernt. thlth€r 143:?9 Trtppingly on tha tongps 31&3 Triton: otd T. blow his wrmtb0d bsrn 412294 T" of the minnotnru 3S3:tS Triucrph: f L stiil If thou ahtqle 2GI:33 meet witb T. and Ilisaster tr90:4 ns\ref dreemsd .ri wrong wd- t" ?3:16 t. of hope over e,xperisnce 176:X T'rirmphsl tby *o. glories, t*' rpalfun shrunk 3V1:6 ?rivial: contests Eiso f,gcm L thitt$s ?51:33 sf,rcbt. peopla i,t arsh l*vely hn* &uags tr94:49 t, aad vartgar.." e$[tion, 7*5 Troop; eents t" rlf hor*e ?f;S plqi$r,e,af Troops; t" $.t5:i$ 'frottine:farswettrthe sfusliws be t- borns aggin? 93r8.* Trq:uble: e ver3'presenthelp in t" 4217 double, dsui:le t$rl ,ssd*" 335:5S hs,st,. cn*ugfuof {ts ow$ 4$4:ge he that seeksL 3??:?6 ki*dness is an$ther'* t. f5fr? mes&is bor.g1 snt* t, 4hS?
Tlouble {conr&rs6f) msn "". sf fewdaynee.fbfi oft- 41:d9 ns1'ert, t, uiltil t. iroubles 273:90 wberethereun * wifi, the.rc'st" 283:34 Trnublee: aro$ agatnst a sea eif L 309:95 dnnot rnsst t. hatf-rpqy f72;SS pach up yr" t. 2*56 the written t" of the brain 336:T2 lltousers: battorus cf my t. rolled 131;3 I fihell wear whJtefianne!t" I3t:4 sh& nelGr But olr his trestt. t 69$ Trcutl repsples ,-. upon L 166:68 ?rowel: lay lt on with a t. 2W.6L that was taid on rriab a t- 30ft?3 Truantt & t, disposi'ian 3$6;4? and el'ery t, knew 15{h68 True: a tndsm 6,. r$nce t$g losg tn 293:76 >. .." BStaxrssIs 12ft€ be so t" to thyself 25:td daroto be L I6htl faith unfaithful "., Sa.Iscly t. 385:5CI snd t. 1793 $lod to ba honret 'tis 'tis he's mad, t,i L tds pr$ 308;?4 tr all bo t. tbst I do thfnk 1ftI6 me and nnyt. love 18:2 Bor ... people'c Judgrceililnlways t, tTlz47 onEreligisn fu s8t. asa$oth€r &2{32 rhg in ths L 386:S sad refiection'buta t. oao I?5:88 Goysung, qf lord. and L 3:fSS tCI{hine swn nelf be t, 306:57 t- es ths sters sbovo 16:Bt whicb wa$ profd t ",, prove falss 82:38 Truism: & t" lE "*o eong tbe t€sgtnre 293;?6 Trrdy: whoru L to knovr fu evulsstine life 64:91 Trurnptet: movs6 mtrc thsn with a t. 373:8? ths t" of & propb,ecyf O, Wind 369:38 to blow ononsorrs L 256:50 Tnusnrnt*: ali tho t" *mundedf,sr his# ?T:6'l soundthe t"ubeat f.bedrsffi 12?:53?ee6s *affpsi t$ trst $f] L 28I:?! Trunchean: srear$hetr'e t" 6ir $*dg*"x rob* 33?lS4 Tirffiks sc trargra t. befsse $!:8F Trustl beemrw L in tbe lerd 43134 extrElxis*zuds66rusl' nst Asfu $S3;5#
661 Tru :t. {cclrf inur,'rJ} f iil i n g t o t " *ve ryb o i l y
,,, t. nc.,L:CICy
262:,tr3 irir';n dar* t" thernselv*s with riien -q57:6S t:ilvci t. a 'lvcrrln who tstrlscne, hetr reai ag* 4S5:29 s c i l e t h a i p r " r t. . . t " i n h i r n 6 3 : 6 3 put nct yclur t. in princes 44:53 somd t- in clrariots 4?;90 thorrgh he slay me yet will I t, 4i;68 t " C o d : s e ea l l 7 5 * 6 : 4 6 t" not a new frienrl .r, old enemy ?8I;60 under his wings shatt thou t, 43;19 Truth: a meiancholy t. .., poor relations 119;35 beauty is t., t. beauty 183:20 constantly speak the t. 64:92 error o4, higtily heap'd for t. t,,) o'erpeer 303:15 found t, in all but one 350:57 great is T., and mighty 61t37 greater the t,, the greater the libsl 263t46 trrabit ,.. ell the test of t. ll,4:79 be,is less renaotofrom the t. t7\:32 his t. at all tlmes firmly stood 188:78 horvever improbable "". Lbet, 125:25 it is a t. universally acknowledged 23:75 Iovo swears that shE is madp of t. 3*t:54 mainly he told the t" 393:59 'posses$es uot only t. mathematies 292:67 joking ,., tell the t, nny way of 365:?5 nowadays t. ... greatestnews 273:14 $ne t. is ctear 25ft12 patiently su$er for the t"'s sake {>4:92 Fiiate saith ",. What is t. ? 56:l? Flato is dear !.6 dearer still is t, 20:28 simpXet. his r:tmost skili 416:48 single hast mairitained .," ths causs sf t, 219;82 ss f,erventhusiasls ,{r s,peakthe t" 2?:49 *cithing but the t. 405:16 speal.,,ing 't. strifb cf with Falseho*el ?00:?4' takes t*'c; to spenk tlie t, 3$i;33 i*11the t. anrl shamethe devii 2?911$ tire t. is rarely puie 405:5 th* un*lcuC*eif'acncf't, 294:88 T, beari:qhaw*y the victory 6l;3S t. c*ulq* $rlt iri wi:r* 24?:6$
Turnips
Truth iconiirrrretti t . f c a r sn o c c l o u r s 2 $ i : 6 1 t . f r o r : rh i s l i p s p r * ' a i i : d I 5 C : 6 7 r" Iles s::ih a lircs i2?:{il t. in everysh*5lherd,'s tongue ?86:?6 t" in fi)ss.lu-:i;,"i.s lli;S?" t" is alwa;vsstrange 85;87 t" is si.r;r..'.1der ti.ranfiction 281:62 t. is the daughter of G*d 28t:63 t" never grows old 281:64 t, of lu:agrnation 186:50 t" sits upo$ the lips of dying men 21,:45 t, .*, told with bad intent 66t29 what is t. ? said jesting Filate 24;8,5 who ever knew T, put to the worse 224:45 wbole t. snd nothing but the t. 281:65 wine in, t" out 283:37 Tulip: not number the streaks of the t. t73:63 Tune: all tle t. that he cd. play 240:82 Cassio kill'd! ,.. murder's out of t. 346:20 Iileaven tries earth if it bo in t. 200:25 pay$ the piper ... call the t. 274:33 sweetly played in t. 81:21 to ths t. of flutes kept stroke 298-9;54 Tunes: devil shd. have all the good t. 1S3:29 weight of Cathedral t. 122:83 Tupman: h{r T" 121:65 Turbulent: f,ree me of this t" priest ? 160:99 Sagacious, Bold, and T. of wit 126:38 T$rk: a maiignant and a turban'd T. 346*?:22 French, CItrT., or Proosian 14733A Turks: peace shall go sleep witb T. 350:56 Turn: lbrtune .., t. thy wbeel 328:63 let not each gay t. ,.. move 249:.l CInegood t, cleser\res ancther 265:36 por son t, in iris grave 281;67 t r e r i d0 n a w o r m . " " w i l l t , 2 8 1 : 5 6 t. ail honest penny ?"81;66 t , L r v * r& n e w l e a f 2 8 1 : 6 8 t. tire t*"*i"ries281:69 t. ts {-iod to praise ancl prey ?4:35 t . u p ( r n * ' sn o s e 2 8 1 : 7 0 t " r r p t r u m p s 2 81 : ?1 Turned: l:avlng once t. round walks on 10(,:{''t} 'irt ca:re*:"rytiringt. up' 119;39 Turtips: if'lhs nnanwho t. sries l?2:56
lbrns Turns: t. no more his bead 106:60 whoso t" as I, this cvening 74:25 Turplsstmus: nemo repente fuit l" 180:68 Turret: Sultau's T. in a Noose of Light 134:65 Turtle: the t. lives 'twixt plated decks 229:98 voice of tbe t. is heard 47:22 T\rrtl+"doves: two L and a partridge 238-9:7 3 Tuscany: even 1[s lanks of T. 20}.4l Tutor: irreverent to my t. 174:72 Tweedlcdec :'C