Familiar Quotations: a Collection of Passages, Phrases, and Proverbs Traced to Their Sources in Ancient and Modern Literature |
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Page 17
Out of Gods blessing into the warme Sunne.5 Ibid . There is no fire without some
smoke.8 Ibid . One swallow maketh not summer . Ibid . Fieldes have eies and
woods have eares.8 Ibid . A cat may looke on a King . Tbid , 1 Pryde and Abuse
of ...
Out of Gods blessing into the warme Sunne.5 Ibid . There is no fire without some
smoke.8 Ibid . One swallow maketh not summer . Ibid . Fieldes have eies and
woods have eares.8 Ibid . A cat may looke on a King . Tbid , 1 Pryde and Abuse
of ...
Page 29
8 I Mother wit . – MARLOWE : Prologue to Tamberlaine the Great , part i .
MIDDLETON : Your Five Gallants , act i . sc . 1 . SHAKESPEARE : Taming of the
Shrew , act ii . sc . 1 . 2 Blessed are the merciful , for they shall obtain mercy .
Matthew v .
8 I Mother wit . – MARLOWE : Prologue to Tamberlaine the Great , part i .
MIDDLETON : Your Five Gallants , act i . sc . 1 . SHAKESPEARE : Taming of the
Shrew , act ii . sc . 1 . 2 Blessed are the merciful , for they shall obtain mercy .
Matthew v .
Page 38
We thinke no greater blisse then such To be as be we would , When blessed
none but such as be The same as be they should . Book . chap . lix . stanza 68 .
SIR RICHARD HOLLAND . O Douglas , O Douglas ! Tendir and trewe . The Buke
of ...
We thinke no greater blisse then such To be as be we would , When blessed
none but such as be The same as be they should . Book . chap . lix . stanza 68 .
SIR RICHARD HOLLAND . O Douglas , O Douglas ! Tendir and trewe . The Buke
of ...
Page 58
Bless thee , Bottom ! bless thee ! thou art translated . Ibid . Lord , what fools these
mortals be ! Sc . 2 . So we grew together , Like to a double cherry , seeming
parted , But yet an union in partition . Ibid . Two lovely berries moulded on one
stem .
Bless thee , Bottom ! bless thee ! thou art translated . Ibid . Lord , what fools these
mortals be ! Sc . 2 . So we grew together , Like to a double cherry , seeming
parted , But yet an union in partition . Ibid . Two lovely berries moulded on one
stem .
Page 66
These blessed candles of the night . Ibid . Fair ladies , you drop manna in the way
Of starved people . Ibid . We will answer all things faithfully . Ibid . Fortune reigns
in gifts of the world . As You Like It . Act i . Sc . 2 . The little foolery that wise men ...
These blessed candles of the night . Ibid . Fair ladies , you drop manna in the way
Of starved people . Ibid . We will answer all things faithfully . Ibid . Fortune reigns
in gifts of the world . As You Like It . Act i . Sc . 2 . The little foolery that wise men ...
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Common terms and phrases
Act ii angels bear beauty better blessed Book born breath Canto Chap comes dark dead dear death doth dream earth face fair fall fear feel fire flower fool give grave grow hand happy hath head hear heart heaven honour hope hour human Ibid JOHN kind king land learned leave light Line live look Lord lost man's Maxim mind morning nature never night o'er once peace pleasure poor proverb reason rise rose round Shakespeare sleep song soul sound speak Speech spirit stand Stanza stars sweet tears tell thee things THOMAS thou thought thousand true truth turn virtue wind wise woman young youth