Familiar Quotations: A Collection of Passages, Phrases, and Proverbs Traced to Their Sources in Ancient and Modern Literature ...Little, Brown, and Company, 1898 - 1158 pages |
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Page 5
... speak With most miraculous organ . SHAKESPEARE : Hamlet , act ii . sc . 2 . 2 Tyrwhitt says this is taken from the Parabolae of ALANUS DE INSULIS , who died in 1294 , - Non teneas aurum totum quod splendet ut aurum ( Do not hold ...
... speak With most miraculous organ . SHAKESPEARE : Hamlet , act ii . sc . 2 . 2 Tyrwhitt says this is taken from the Parabolae of ALANUS DE INSULIS , who died in 1294 , - Non teneas aurum totum quod splendet ut aurum ( Do not hold ...
Page 50
... . Sc . 1 . Ibid . I have a good eye , uncle ; I can see a church by day- light . Ibid 1 For every why he had a wherefore . - BUTLER : Hudibras , part i canto i . line 132 . - Speak low if you speak love . Much Ado about 50 SHAKESPEARE .
... . Sc . 1 . Ibid . I have a good eye , uncle ; I can see a church by day- light . Ibid 1 For every why he had a wherefore . - BUTLER : Hudibras , part i canto i . line 132 . - Speak low if you speak love . Much Ado about 50 SHAKESPEARE .
Page 51
... Speak low if you speak love . Much Ado about Nothing . Act ii . Sc . 1 Friendship is constant in all other things . Save in the office and affairs of love : Therefore all hearts in love use their own tongues ; Let every eye negotiate ...
... Speak low if you speak love . Much Ado about Nothing . Act ii . Sc . 1 Friendship is constant in all other things . Save in the office and affairs of love : Therefore all hearts in love use their own tongues ; Let every eye negotiate ...
Page 53
... speak comfort to that grief Which they themselves not feel . Ibid . Charm ache with air , and agony with words . Ibid . " T is all men's office to speak patience To those that wring under the load of sorrow , But no man's virtue nor ...
... speak comfort to that grief Which they themselves not feel . Ibid . Charm ache with air , and agony with words . Ibid . " T is all men's office to speak patience To those that wring under the load of sorrow , But no man's virtue nor ...
Page 57
... speak in a monstrous little voice . Ibid . I am slow of study . Ibid . That would hang us , every mother's son . Ibid . I will roar you as gently as any sucking dove ; I will roar you , an ' t were any nightingale . Ibid . A proper man ...
... speak in a monstrous little voice . Ibid . I am slow of study . Ibid . That would hang us , every mother's son . Ibid . I will roar you as gently as any sucking dove ; I will roar you , an ' t were any nightingale . Ibid . A proper man ...
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Common terms and phrases
Anatomy of Melancholy angels BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER beauty better blessed Book breath Cæsar Canto Chap Chaucer Childe Harold's Pilgrimage dark dead dear death deed Devil DIOGENES LAERTIUS Don Quixote doth dream Dryden earth Epistle Fable fair fear flower fool Frag give glory grave hand happy hast hath heart heaven Henry Heywood honour hope Hudibras Ibia Ibid JOHN King Lady light Line live look Lord man's Maxim Melancholy mind morning Nature ne'er never night numbers o'er pleasure PLUTARCH POPE proverb PUBLIUS SYRUS Richard III Sect Shakespeare sing sleep smile song Sonnet sorrow soul Speech spirit Stanza stars sweet tale tears thee Themistocles There's thine things THOMAS THOMAS HEYWOOD thou art thought tongue truth unto viii virtue WILLIAM wind wise woman words young youth