Familiar Quotations: Being an Attempt to Trace Their Sources, Passages and Phrases in Common UseLittle, Brown & Company, 1882 - 864 páginas |
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Página 15
... soul the body form doth take , For soul is form , and doth the body make . Hymn in Honour of Beauty . Line 132 . Full little knowest thou that hast not tride , What hell it is in suing long to bide ; To loose good dayes that might be ...
... soul the body form doth take , For soul is form , and doth the body make . Hymn in Honour of Beauty . Line 132 . Full little knowest thou that hast not tride , What hell it is in suing long to bide ; To loose good dayes that might be ...
Página 20
... soul : see , where it flies ! O , thou art fairer than the evening air , Clad in the beauty of a thousand stars . Ibid . Ibid . Quoted by Shakespeare in As You Like It . None ever loved but at first sight they loved . Chapman , Blind ...
... soul : see , where it flies ! O , thou art fairer than the evening air , Clad in the beauty of a thousand stars . Ibid . Ibid . Quoted by Shakespeare in As You Like It . None ever loved but at first sight they loved . Chapman , Blind ...
Página 30
... soul , bruised with adversity . Act ii . Sc . I. One Pinch , a hungry lean - fac'd villain , A mere anatomy . Act v . Sc . I. A needy , hollow - ey'd , sharp - looking wretch , A living dead man . MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING . Ibid . He hath ...
... soul , bruised with adversity . Act ii . Sc . I. One Pinch , a hungry lean - fac'd villain , A mere anatomy . Act v . Sc . I. A needy , hollow - ey'd , sharp - looking wretch , A living dead man . MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING . Ibid . He hath ...
Página 34
... soul . Ibid . Ibid . A child of our grandmother Eve , a female ; or , for thy more sweet understanding , a woman . Ibid . The world was very guilty of such a ballad some three ages since ; but , I think , now ' t is not to be found ...
... soul . Ibid . Ibid . A child of our grandmother Eve , a female ; or , for thy more sweet understanding , a woman . Ibid . The world was very guilty of such a ballad some three ages since ; but , I think , now ' t is not to be found ...
Página 55
... soul of our grandam might haply inhabit a bird . Clo . What thinkest thou of his opinion ? Mal . I think nobly of the soul , and no way approve his opinion . Act iv . Sc . 2 . Thus the whirligig of Time brings in his re- venges . For ...
... soul of our grandam might haply inhabit a bird . Clo . What thinkest thou of his opinion ? Mal . I think nobly of the soul , and no way approve his opinion . Act iv . Sc . 2 . Thus the whirligig of Time brings in his re- venges . For ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Absalom and Achitophel Acti angels Beaumont and Fletcher beauty Ben Jonson better Book viii breath Cæsar Canto Canto iii Childe Harold's Pilgrimage Compare dark death Devil divine doth dream Dryden Dunciad Dyce earth Eloisa to Abelard Epistle Epitaph Essay eyes fair fear flower fools give glory grave Hamlet continued hand happy hast hath heart heaven hell Heywood's Proverbs honour Hudibras Ibid John Julius Cæsar King Henry Lady light Line live Lord man's Merchant of Venice merry mind morning nature ne'er never Night Thoughts numbers o'er Othello Paradise Lost continued Parti pleasure Pope praise Prov Satire Shakespeare sleep smile Song Sonnet sorrow soul spirit Stanza stars sweet tale tears thee There's things THOMAS thou tongue truth virtue wind wise woman words youth