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The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations Preface
The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations Preface
The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations Preface
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8.69 Felicia Hemans 1793-1835<br />
8.70 John Heming 1556-1630 and Henry Condell d. 1627<br />
8.71 Ernest Hemingway 1899-1961<br />
8.72 Arthur W. D. Henley<br />
8.73 W. E. Henley 1849-1903<br />
8.74 Henri IV 1553-1610<br />
8.75 Henry II 1133-89<br />
8.76 Henry VIII 1491-1547<br />
8.77 Matthew Henry 1662-1714<br />
8.78 O. Henry (William Sydney Porter) 1862-1910<br />
8.79 Patrick Henry 1736-99<br />
8.80 Joseph Henshaw 1603-79<br />
8.81 Heraclitus fl. 513 B.C.<br />
8.82 A. P. Herbert 1890-1971<br />
8.83 Lord Herbert <strong>of</strong> Cherbury 1583-1648<br />
8.84 George Herbert 1593-1633<br />
8.85 Robert Herrick 1591-1674<br />
8.86 Lord Hervey 1696-1743<br />
8.87 Hesiod c.700 B.C.<br />
8.88 Hermann Hesse 1877-1962<br />
8.89 Gordon Hewart (Viscount Hewart) 1870-1943<br />
8.90 Du Bose Heyward 1885-1940 and Ira Gershwin 1896-1983<br />
8.91 John Heywood c.1497-c.1580<br />
8.92 Thomas Heywood c.1574-1641<br />
8.93 Sir Seymour Hicks 1871-1949<br />
8.95 Joe Hill 1879-1915<br />
8.96 Pattie S. Hill 1868-1946<br />
8.97 Rowland Hill 1744-1833<br />
8.98 Sir Edmund Hillary 1919—<br />
8.99 Fred Hillebrand 1893—<br />
8.100 Hillel ‘<strong>The</strong> Elder’ c.70 B.C.-c. A.D. 10<br />
8.101 Lady Hillingdon 1857-1940<br />
8.102 James Hilton 1900-54<br />
8.103 Hippocleides 6th century B.C.<br />
8.104 Hippocrates c.460-357 B.C.<br />
8.105 Alfred Hitchcock 1899-1980
8.69 Felicia Hemans 1793-1835 8.70 John Heming 1556-1630 and Henry Condell d. 1627 8.71 Ernest Hemingway 1899-1961 8.72 Arthur W. D. Henley 8.73 W. E. Henley 1849-1903 8.74 Henri IV 1553-1610 8.75 Henry II 1133-89 8.76 Henry VIII 1491-1547 8.77 Matthew Henry 1662-1714 8.78 O. Henry (William Sydney Porter) 1862-1910 8.79 Patrick Henry 1736-99 8.80 Joseph Henshaw 1603-79 8.81 Heraclitus fl. 513 B.C. 8.82 A. P. Herbert 1890-1971 8.83 Lord Herbert <strong>of</strong> Cherbury 1583-1648 8.84 George Herbert 1593-1633 8.85 Robert Herrick 1591-1674 8.86 Lord Hervey 1696-1743 8.87 Hesiod c.700 B.C. 8.88 Hermann Hesse 1877-1962 8.89 Gordon Hewart (Viscount Hewart) 1870-1943 8.90 Du Bose Heyward 1885-1940 and Ira Gershwin 1896-1983 8.91 John Heywood c.1497-c.1580 8.92 Thomas Heywood c.1574-1641 8.93 Sir Seymour Hicks 1871-1949 8.95 Joe Hill 1879-1915 8.96 Pattie S. Hill 1868-1946 8.97 Rowland Hill 1744-1833 8.98 Sir Edmund Hillary 1919— 8.99 Fred Hillebrand 1893— 8.100 Hillel ‘<strong>The</strong> Elder’ c.70 B.C.-c. A.D. 10 8.101 Lady Hillingdon 1857-1940 8.102 James Hilton 1900-54 8.103 Hippocleides 6th century B.C. 8.104 Hippocrates c.460-357 B.C. 8.105 Alfred Hitchcock 1899-1980
8.106 Adolf Hitler 1889-1945 8.107 Thomas Hobbes 1588-1679 8.108 John Cam Hobhouse (Baron Broughton) 1786-1869 8.109 Ralph Hodgson 1871-1962 8.110 Eric H<strong>of</strong>fer 1902-83 8.111 Heinrich H<strong>of</strong>fmann 1809-94 8.112 Max H<strong>of</strong>fman 8.113 Gerard H<strong>of</strong>fnung 1925-59 8.114 Lancelot Hogben 1895-1975 8.115 James Hogg 1770-1835 8.116 Paul Henri, Baron d’Holbach 1723-89 8.117 Billie Holiday 1915-59 8.118 Billie Holiday 1915-59 and Arthur Herzog Jr. 1901-83 8.119 1st Lord Holland 1705-74 8.120 3rd Lord Holland 1733-1840 8.121 Stanley Holloway 1890-1982 8.122 John H. Holmes 1879-1964 8.123 Oliver Wendell Holmes 1809-94 8.124 John Home 1722-1808 8.125 Lord Home (fourteenth Earl <strong>of</strong> Home, formerly Sir Alec Douglas-Home) 1903—1963- 4 8.126 Homer 8th century B.C. 8.127 William Hone 1780-1842 8.128 Arthur Honegger 1892-1955 8.129 Thomas Hood 1799-1845 8.130 Richard Hooker c.1554-1600 8.131 Ellen Sturgis Hooper 1816-41 8.132 Herbert Hoover 1874-1964 8.133 Anthony Hope (Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins) 1863-1933 8.134 Bob Hope 1903— 8.135 Francis Hope 1938-74 8.136 Laurence Hope (Adela Florence Nicolson) 1865-1904 8.137 Gerard Manley Hopkins 1844-89 8.138 Joseph Hopkinson 1770-1842 8.139 Horace 65-8 B.C. 8.140 Samuel Horsley 1733-1806
- Page 1 and 2: * If you liked the Ebook visit GetP
- Page 3 and 4: middle of “A.” Under each autho
- Page 5 and 6: context of every keyword. These sec
- Page 7 and 8: 1.55 William Allingham 1828-89 1.56
- Page 9 and 10: 1.121 Alan Ayckbourn 1939— 1.122
- Page 11 and 12: 2.67 Barnard Elliott Bee 1823-61 2.
- Page 13 and 14: 2.116.2.20 Isaiah 2.116.2.21 Jeremi
- Page 15 and 16: 2.141 Boethius (Anicius Manlius Sev
- Page 17 and 18: 2.213 John Brown 1800-59 2.214 Lew
- Page 19 and 20: 3.11 Callimachus c.305-c.240 B.C. 3
- Page 21 and 22: 3.82 Chateaubriand François-Renè,
- Page 23 and 24: 3.154 Auguste Comte 1798-1857 3.155
- Page 25 and 26: 4.6 Clarence Darrow 1857-1938 4.7 C
- Page 27 and 28: 4.58 Joan Didion 1934— 4.59 Wentw
- Page 29 and 30: 5.11 King Edward VIII (Duke of Wind
- Page 31 and 32: 6.27 Fred Fisher 1875-1942 6.28 H.
- Page 33 and 34: 6.100 Rose Fyleman 1877-1957 7.0 G
- Page 35 and 36: 7.71 John Gower c.1330-1408 7.72 Si
- Page 37: 8.33 Sir William Harcourt 1827-1904
- Page 41 and 42: 9.9 Robert G. Ingersoll 1833-99 9.1
- Page 43 and 44: 11.4 Henry Home, Lord Kames 1696-17
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- Page 47 and 48: 12.88 Sam M. Lewis 1885-1959 and Jo
- Page 49 and 50: 1.8 Mary McCarthy 1912-89 1.9 Georg
- Page 51 and 52: 1.80 Martial A.D. c.40-104 1.81 And
- Page 53 and 54: 1.153 Montesquieu (Charles-Louis Se
- Page 55 and 56: 2.19 Huey Newton 1942— 2.20 Sir I
- Page 57 and 58: 4.3 Thomas Paine 1737-1809 4.4 Jos
- Page 59 and 60: 4.75 John Pomfret 1667-1702 4.76 Ma
- Page 61 and 62: 6.26 Jules Renard 1864-1910 6.27 Mo
- Page 63 and 64: 6.98 Matthew Roydon fl. 1580-1622 6
- Page 65 and 66: 7.59 Edward Sexby d. 1658 7.60 Anne
- Page 67 and 68: 7.88 Maurice Sigler 1901-61 and Al
- Page 69 and 70: 7.160 Sir Richard Steele 1672-1729
- Page 71 and 72: 8.34 R. S. Thomas 8.35 Francis Thom
- Page 73 and 74: 10.18 Queen Victoria 1819-1901 10.1
- Page 75 and 76: 11.63 James Mcneill Whistler 1834-1
- Page 77 and 78: 11.136 Sir Henry Wotton 1568-1639 1
- Page 79 and 80: 1.6 Lord Acton (John Emerich Edward
- Page 81 and 82: ‘The Education of Henry Adams’
- Page 83 and 84: But we’ll do more, Sempronius; we
- Page 85 and 86: These widows, Sir, are the most per
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1.37 Mary Alcock c.1742-98 A masque
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Float like a butterfly, sting like
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Where Peter is, there must be the C
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weather sharp, the days short, the
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The children in Holland take pleasu
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God be in my eyes, And in my lookin
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Hierusalem, my happy home When shal
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‘American Restaurant Magazine’
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But if that effort be too great, To
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‘In the 11th of Elizabeth’ (17
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From a West Indian calypso and adop
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Annotation to a ministerial brief,
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And if she won’t, she won’t; so
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laisser libre que le bras du bourre
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Know thyself. Inscribed on the temp
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May some Christian hold for me the
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every artifice possible—truer tha
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Law is a bottomless pit. ‘The His
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Greek original ascribed to Aristotl
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And naked shingles of the world. Ah
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Eternal Passion! Eternal Pain! ‘P
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Hath trailed the hunter’s javelin
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To shake his sapient head and give
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‘Literature and Dogma’ (1873) c
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‘To all gentlemen and yeomen of E
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If all men are born free, how is it
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‘Brief Lives’ ‘William Shakes
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‘In Memory of W. B. Yeats’ (194
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O it’s the gate where they’re t
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To the citizen or the police; We mu
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Happy the hare at morning, for she
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pain of apprehension to be frequent
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‘Northanger Abbey’ (1818) ch. 3
- Page 155 and 156:
Do you realize, Mrs Foster, the hou
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If a man will begin with certaintie
- Page 159 and 160:
‘Essays’ (1625) ‘Of Boldness
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‘Essays’ (1625) ‘Of Great Pla
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to be read wholly, and with diligen
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Quod enim mavult homo verum esse, i
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A cabinet is a combining committee
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2.10 Michael Bakunin 1814-76 Die Lu
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Young Jemmy Grove on his death-bed
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Curst be the heart that thought the
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He flew awa’ in a bleezing flame.
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God send every gentleman Such hound
- Page 179 and 180:
2.19 Edward Bangs Yankee Doodle cam
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‘Circumspice, si Monumentum requi
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2.34 Peter Barnes 1931— Claire: H
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charm for all; and most have charm
- Page 187 and 188:
Hypocrite lecteur,—mon semblable,
- Page 189 and 190:
‘Le Mariage de Figaro’ (1785) a
- Page 191 and 192:
‘First Love’ (1973) p. 8 If I h
- Page 193 and 194:
Talis, inquiens, mihi videtur, rex,
- Page 195 and 196:
A swear-word in a rustic slum A sim
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I owe a duty, where I cannot love.
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But as it is!...My language fails!
- Page 201 and 202:
‘The Pacifist’ (1938) When I am
- Page 203 and 204:
‘American Names’ (1927) We thou
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2.88 Ada Benson and Fred Fisher 187
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By a mighty effort of will, Overcam
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Come on and hear, Come on and hear,
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2.107 Carl Bernstein 1944—and Bob
- Page 213 and 214:
Come shooting through the bridge? A
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Love-thirty, love-forty, oh! weakne
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The object of government in peace a
- Page 219 and 220:
Woman, because she was taken out of
- Page 221 and 222:
Shall not the Judge of all the eart
- Page 223 and 224:
Exodus ch. 2, v. 3 Who made thee a
- Page 225 and 226:
Thou shalt not kill. Thou shalt not
- Page 227 and 228:
Thou shalt not muzzle the ox when h
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Judges ch. 12, v. 6 Out of the eate
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Am I a dog, that thou comest to me
- Page 233 and 234:
1 Kings ch. 14, v. 20 He went and d
- Page 235 and 236:
2 Kings ch. 9, v. 35 Thou trustest
- Page 237 and 238:
I am escaped with the skin of my te
- Page 239 and 240:
Yet a little sleep, a little slumbe
- Page 241 and 242:
Train up a child in the way he shou
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done: and there is no new thing und
- Page 245 and 246:
Truly the light is sweet, and a ple
- Page 247 and 248:
keepers of the walls took away my v
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the midst of a people of unclean li
- Page 251 and 252:
The bread of adversity, and the wat
- Page 253 and 254:
He hath no form nor comeliness; and
- Page 255 and 256:
Is there no balm in Gilead? Jeremia
- Page 257 and 258:
Daniel ch. 7, v. 9 O Daniel, a man
- Page 259 and 260:
Great is Truth, and mighty above al
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He that toucheth pitch shall be def
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In Rama was there a voice heard, la
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And forgive us our debts, as we for
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waters. St Matthew ch. 8, v. 32 He
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Then he saith, I will return into m
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St Matthew ch. 18, v. 20 Lord, how
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St Matthew ch. 25, v. 21 Lord, I kn
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For what shall it profit a man, if
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St Luke ch. 7, v. 47 No man, having
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And when he came to himself, he sai
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Why seek ye the living among the de
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Verily, verily, I say unto you, He
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Put up thy sword into the sheath. S
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Acts Of The Apostles ch. 7, v. 58 S
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Paul, thou art beside thyself; much
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Hath not the potter power over the
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All things are lawful for me, but a
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for the letter killeth, but the spi
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That we henceforth be no more child
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2.116.4.12 Colossians Touch not; ta
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2 Timothy ch. 1, v. 13 Silly women
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James ch. 2, v. 20 How great a matt
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is, and which was, and which is to
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Revelation ch. 7, v. 16 God shall w
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Revelation ch. 21, v. 4 I will give
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St John ch. 16, v. 5 Ecce homo. Beh
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By God, O King, I will neither go n
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Whistling aloud to keep his courage
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The Vision of Christ that thou dost
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Is an arrow from the Almighty’s b
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generation to generation. ‘The Ma
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So I piped, he wept to hear. ‘Son
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‘Songs of Experience’ (1794)
- Page 327 and 328:
I am for the woods against the worl
- Page 329 and 330:
‘Letters on the Study and Use of
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The original is unfaithful to the t
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Which, like old idols, lost obscene
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Fate is not an eagle, it creeps lik
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For such despight they cast on fema
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‘Mutter Courage’ (1939) sc. 6 D
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England is the mother of Parliament
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No trembler in the world’s storm-
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And in that Heaven of all their wis
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‘Songs of the Governing Classes
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‘The Garden of Cyrus’ (1658) ch
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stand afraid and start at us. ‘Re
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Their sole work is to represent the
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‘Abt Vogler’ (1864) st. 2 On th
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‘The Bishop Orders his Tomb’ (1
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And lack of love from love made man
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‘A Grammarian’s Funeral’ (185
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Only a memory of the same. ‘The L
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Works done least rapidly, Art most
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The best and the last! I would hate
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‘Saul’ (1855) st. 18 I want to
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2.226 Beau Brummell (George Bryan B
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Cannot be wrong. Lines found on his
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slippers, in the sunshine and with
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But I can tell you anyhow, I’ll k
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This barbarous philosophy, which is
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Magnanimity in politics is not seld
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Inscription on the pedestal of the
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Before ye gie poor Frailty names, S
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I wasna fou, but just had plenty.
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When we were first acquent, Your lo
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‘Sketch’ inscribed to Charles J
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An’ fareweel dear, deluding woman
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They lard their lean books with the
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But to us, probability is the very
- Page 399 and 400:
He that complies against his will,
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On the strawberry, in Izaak Walton
- Page 403 and 404:
His blood-red tresses deep’ning i
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I stood Among them, but not of them
- Page 407 and 408:
Then trembles into silence as befor
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So that my name of Epic’s no misn
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‘Don Juan’ (1819-24) canto 3, s
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Or a ‘Ha! ha!’ or ‘Bah!’—
- Page 415 and 416:
Absorbed in passion’s and in natu
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‘Stanzas Written on the Road betw
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(1975) Wordsworth—stupendous geni
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3.6 James M. Cain 1892-1977 The pos
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3.15 Lord Camden (Charles Pratt, Ea
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For I fear I have nothing original
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les jours. I’ll tell you a great
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3.26 Al Capp (Alfred Gerard Caplin)
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When thou, poor excommunicate From
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History a distillation of rumour.
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Little grains of sand, Make the mig
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No! No! Sentence first—verdict af
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choose it to mean—neither more no
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The Middle of Next Week. ‘The one
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‘My God, I Love Thee’ (1849 hym
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Sirmio, bright eye of peninsulas an
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I hate and I love: why I do so you
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to speak some languages that is not
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Oh, the gallant fisher’s life, It
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It was about eleven o’clock in th
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John Cleese 1939— Terry Gilliam 1
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La vraye science et le vray ètude
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But al be that he was a philosophre
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The carl spak oo thing, but he thog
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‘The Canterbury Tales’ ‘The P
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Thanne love I most thise floures wh
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With sownes ful of hevenyssh melodi
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Letter to Alexei Suvorin, 4 May 188
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I tell you naught for your comfort,
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Thieves respect property. They mere
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‘Poems’ (1703) ‘To the Ladies
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Guilt in his heart, and famine in h
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The utmost he has been able to gain
- Page 481 and 482:
Describing the qualifications desir
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Abiit, excessit, evasit, erupit. He
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3.104 Earl of Clarendon 1609-74 Wit
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The arts of power and its minions a
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First Lord Clive’ (1848) ch. 1 3.
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‘The Latest Decalogue’ (1862)
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That I will soon be there. ‘Give
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He holds him with his glittering ey
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It ceased; yet still the sails made
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That tremble into thought, as o’e
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All thoughts, all passions, all del
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of his works came out of the unfath
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Old iron, old iron? ‘Any Old Iron
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When you have nothing to say, say n
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Aye, ’tis well enough for a serva
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‘To Sir Godfrey Kneller’ 3.157
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A man that is born falls into a dre
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‘A Song for the Ragged Schools’
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And shivering-sweet to the touch? O
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eau ne peut être la voie ni de l
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‘Drinking’ (1656) Fill all the
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A tale should be judicious, clear,
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‘Say, poor sinner, lov’st thou
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That slaves, howe’er contented, n
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‘The Task’ (1785) bk. 5 ‘The
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Where all presented to the eye or e
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You who desired so much—in vain t
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It may be for years, and it may be
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3.205 Bing Crosby 1903-77, Roy Turk
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mam) sherman. ‘1 x 1’ (1944) no
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4.0 D 4.1 Samuel Daniel 1563-1619 P
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Considerate la vostra semenza: Fatt
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No, Sir, because I have time to thi
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It was the Rainbow gave thee birth,
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is a soul in prison, I am not free.
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‘The True-Born Englishman’ (170
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Ann, Ann! Come! quick as you can! T
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4.33 Jack Dempsey 1895-1983 Honey,
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4.39 Edward Stanley, fourteenth Ear
- Page 559 and 560:
But now he’s gone aloft. ‘Tom B
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Barkis is willin’. ‘David Coppe
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‘Dombey and Son’ (1848) ch. 23
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Some people...may be Rooshans, and
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‘Nicholas Nickleby’ (1839) ch.
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‘Pickwick Papers’ (1837) ch. 2
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‘A Tale of Two Cities’ (1859) b
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Choose One— Then—close the Valv
- Page 575 and 576:
When we start deceiving ourselves i
- Page 577 and 578:
in financial embarrassment. ‘Hans
- Page 579 and 580:
The depositary of power is always u
- Page 581 and 582:
Sayings and their Authors’ (1904)
- Page 583 and 584:
’Tis enough, that when it fell, T
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‘Holy Sonnets’ (after 1609) no.
- Page 587 and 588:
Of golden sands, and crystal brooks
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‘Songs and Sonnets’ ‘A Noctur
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if a clod be washed away by the sea
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my ears yielding like swinging door
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Ex-Professor Moriarty of mathematic
- Page 597 and 598:
With such acts fill a pen? Or Engla
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Property has its duties as well as
- Page 601 and 602:
‘Absalom and Achitophel’ (1681)
- Page 603 and 604:
Thou best of thieves; who, with an
- Page 605 and 606:
And thus the child imposes on the m
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An art, in London only is a trade.
- Page 609 and 610:
Some to undo, and some to be undone
- Page 611 and 612:
4.96 W. E. B. Du Bois (William Ewar
- Page 613 and 614:
And feblit with infirmitie: Timor m
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A sunbeam in a winter’s day, Is a
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The haunted, frightened trees, out
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And you’ll never be chid. ‘The
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‘The Flying Spider—Observations
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The mother’s yearning, that compl
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I should like to know what is the p
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‘Four Quartets’ ‘Burnt Norton
- Page 629 and 630:
(Costing not less than everything)
- Page 631 and 632:
To swell a progress, start a scene
- Page 633 and 634:
I read, much of the night, and go s
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These fragments I have shored again
- Page 637 and 638:
People’ (1874) ch. 7; ‘Dodd’s
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What is a communist? One who hath y
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Art is a jealous mistress. ‘The C
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1912 that she copied this in her ha
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In the country of the blind the one
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I gave my life for freedom—This I
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Said to Lord Boyd-Orr at a conferen
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‘German Requiem’ (1981) p. 1 6.
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certain quantity of delicate white
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Never contradict Never explain Neve
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The flower that once has blown for
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And in thy joyous errand reach the
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And if against all these thou keep
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A direful death indeed they had Tha
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Care-charming Sleep, thou easer of
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‘The Author’ (1757) act 2 So sh
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There’s a silver lining Through t
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has value. ‘A Passage to India’
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He was uniformly of an opinion whic
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Lies snug As a bug In a rug. Letter
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Anatomy is destiny. ‘Gesammelte S
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The land was ours before we were th
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Is incontestable. It undercuts The
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Letter to a patron, in John Hayes
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a las cinco de la tarde At five in
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Resolution adopted by the Massachus
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‘The Beggar’s Opera’ (1728) a
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I hate all Boets and Bainters. In J
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7.36 Edward Gibbon 1737-94 The vari
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‘Cold Comfort Farm’ (1932) ch.
- Page 697 and 698:
Ambassadors cropped up like hay, Pr
- Page 699 and 700:
Filled to the brim with girlish gle
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If you walk down Piccadilly with a
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‘The Pirates of Penzance’ (1879
- Page 705 and 706:
House of Commons, 7 May 1877 The re
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Ohne Butter werden wir fertig, aber
- Page 709 and 710:
Weeping and watching for the morrow
- Page 711 and 712:
‘The Deserted Village’ (1770) l
- Page 713 and 714:
‘The Good-Natured Man’ (1768) a
- Page 715 and 716:
Two things stand like stone, Kindne
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Send me the half that’s got my ke
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Of all pains, the greatest pain Is
- Page 721 and 722:
Fair laughs the morn, and soft the
- Page 723 and 724:
‘Ode on the Death of a Favourite
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‘The Spleen’ (1737) l. 92 By ha
- Page 727 and 728:
7.94 Gregory VII 1020-85 Dilexi ius
- Page 729 and 730:
Christmas card I received this morn
- Page 731 and 732:
Order to British troops, 12 April 1
- Page 733 and 734:
‘Works’ (1625) p. 670 8.15 Fitz
- Page 735 and 736:
8.26 Learned Hand 1872-1961 A self-
- Page 737 and 738:
words—those terrible marks of the
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If way to the Better there be, it e
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And nestlings fly: And the little b
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Licker talks mighty loud w’en it
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At last the belles ryngeth to evens
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university. ‘Table Talk’ vol. 1
- Page 749 and 750:
Wherever books are burned, men also
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Where do the noses go? I always won
- Page 753 and 754:
The better day, the worse deed. ‘
- Page 755 and 756:
The Common Law of England has been
- Page 757 and 758:
And I replied, ‘My Lord.’ ‘Th
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‘Man’ (1633) When boys go first
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‘Outlandish Proverbs’ (1640) no
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Made us nobly wild, not mad. ‘An
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At once, a bud, and yet a rose full
- Page 767 and 768:
Well, we knocked the bastard off! O
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whatsoever, if but a man. ‘Leviat
- Page 771 and 772:
deliberate and forced, and partakes
- Page 773 and 774:
Happy, and glorious, Long to reign
- Page 775 and 776:
It is not written what a man shall
- Page 777 and 778:
Glad to death’s mystery, Swift to
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‘The Song of the Shirt’ (1843)
- Page 781 and 782:
Wild air, world-mothering air, Nest
- Page 783 and 784:
‘Spring and Fall: to a young chil
- Page 785 and 786:
Reddiderit iunctura novum. You will
- Page 787 and 788:
Quidquid delirant reges plectuntur
- Page 789 and 790:
What pleasure does it give to be ri
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‘Odes’ bk. 1, no. 37, l. 1 Pers
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‘Odes’ bk. 3, no. 29, l. 12 Exe
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Even though broken up, the limbs of
- Page 797 and 798:
The hour when earth’s foundations
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The gale, it plies the saplings dou
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‘Philistine’ December 1909, p.
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On rèsiste á l’invasion des arm
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Abou Ben Adhem (may his tribe incre
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That action is best, which procures
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far as the guardsman’s cut and th
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‘Peer Gynt’ (1867) act 4 Tar de
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9.11 Eugéne Ionesco 1912— C’es
- Page 815 and 816:
After leaving his sick-bed in Octob
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One might ennumerate the items of h
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10.11 Randall Jarrell 1914-65 To Am
- Page 821 and 822:
We are not afraid to follow truth w
- Page 823 and 824:
10.23 William Jerome 1865-1932 Any
- Page 825 and 826:
The saddest of all Kings Crowned, a
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If the changes we fear be thus irre
- Page 829 and 830:
I am disappointed by that stroke of
- Page 831 and 832:
‘Taxation No Tyranny’ (1775 (Ya
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[Johnson:] No, Sir; stark insensibi
- Page 835 and 836:
on people praying with him; and I
- Page 837 and 838:
In James Boswell ‘The Life of Sam
- Page 839 and 840:
Charing-Cross. In James Boswell ‘
- Page 841 and 842:
In James Boswell ‘The Life of Sam
- Page 843 and 844:
Classical quotation is the parole o
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This was easy;—he therefore caugh
- Page 847 and 848:
Hester Lynch Piozzi ‘Anecdotes of
- Page 849 and 850:
True happiness Consists not in the
- Page 851 and 852:
‘A Celebration of Charis’ (1640
- Page 853 and 854:
It is not growing like a tree In bu
- Page 855 and 856:
Let him who has won it bear the pal
- Page 857 and 858:
By an epiphany he meant a sudden sp
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shewed it thee? Love. What shewed H
- Page 861 and 862:
10.60 Juvenal A.D. c.60-c.130 Diffi
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Only two things does he worry about
- Page 865 and 866:
Ehrfurcht, ie “fter und anhaltend
- Page 867 and 868:
‘The Great Hunger’ (1947) I hat
- Page 869 and 870:
She loves me dearly; She is so cons
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Where’s the cheek that doth not f
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‘I stood tip-toe upon a little hi
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For ever wilt thou love, and she be
- Page 877 and 878:
Where palsy shakes a few, sad, last
- Page 879 and 880:
‘On the Sea’ (1817) Yet the swe
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And precipices show untrodden green
- Page 883 and 884:
Scenery is fine—but human nature
- Page 885 and 886:
Letter to J. H. Reynolds, 24 August
- Page 887 and 888:
Keep me, O keep me, King of Kings,
- Page 889 and 890:
O! they’re all fled with thee, Ro
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I think that I shall never see A po
- Page 893 and 894:
the presence of justice. Letter fro
- Page 895 and 896:
And the children stood watching the
- Page 897 and 898:
‘The Ballad of East and West’ (
- Page 899 and 900:
‘In Partibus’ (1909) Then ye re
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What is a woman that you forsake he
- Page 903 and 904:
The sheep-bells and the ship-bells
- Page 905 and 906:
‘Just So Stories’ (1902) ‘The
- Page 907 and 908:
Art does not reproduce the visible;
- Page 909 and 910:
God seems to have left the receiver
- Page 911 and 912:
12.1 Henry Labouchere 1831-1912 He
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12.7 Fiorello La Guardia 1882-1947
- Page 915 and 916:
[A pun] is a pistol let off at the
- Page 917 and 918:
£40,000 a year a moderate income
- Page 919 and 920:
Epigram in ‘The Atlas’, 28 Apri
- Page 921 and 922:
Et emitte coelitus Lucis tuae radiu
- Page 923 and 924:
Leaving the gardens tidy, The thous
- Page 925 and 926:
One is never as unhappy as one thin
- Page 927 and 928:
Ours is essentially a tragic age, s
- Page 929 and 930:
And so, I missed my chance with one
- Page 931 and 932:
ode madly off in all directions.
- Page 933 and 934:
‘More Nonsense’ (1872) ‘One H
- Page 935 and 936:
Title of book (1952) The few really
- Page 937 and 938:
It is well that war is so terrible.
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Above us only sky, Imagine all the
- Page 941 and 942:
Who, when you win, will always give
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On Oscar Wilde, in ‘Letters to th
- Page 945 and 946:
Never knowingly undersold. Slogan (
- Page 947 and 948:
What is conservatism? Is it not adh
- Page 949 and 950:
Minds still passion-ridden, soul-po
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scourged mankind. I hope we may say
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You would think him a very foolish
- Page 955 and 956:
The time has come for all good men
- Page 957 and 958:
And the thoughts of youth are long,
- Page 959 and 960:
Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere
- Page 961 and 962:
apocryphal) J’ai failli attendre.
- Page 963 and 964:
Generic name for the archetypal rig
- Page 965 and 966:
The aquarium is gone. Everywhere, g
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Thinking nothing done while anythin
- Page 969 and 970:
And life is given to none freehold,
- Page 971 and 972:
‘Campaspe’ (1584) act 3, sc. 3
- Page 973 and 974:
The English Bible, a book which, if
- Page 975 and 976:
A rake among scholars, and a schola
- Page 977 and 978:
Then out spake brave Horatius, The
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By and by God caught his eye. ‘Re
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1.19 Sir Ian MacGregor 1912— Peop
- Page 983 and 984:
‘The Gutenberg Galaxy’ (1962) p
- Page 985 and 986:
There were two glasses and two chai
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Liberty is to faction what air is t
- Page 989 and 990:
‘Lettres et Opuscules Inèdits’
- Page 991 and 992:
Wherefore, madam, I pray you kiss m
- Page 993 and 994:
announce the beginning of a new mon
- Page 995 and 996:
1.71 Edwin Markham 1852-1940 Bowed
- Page 997 and 998:
O I’ll leap up to my God: who pul
- Page 999 and 1000:
Nature that framed us of four eleme
- Page 1001 and 1002:
honesty is a good thing but it is n
- Page 1003 and 1004:
‘Bermudas’ (written c.1653, pub
- Page 1005 and 1006:
While man there walked without a ma
- Page 1007 and 1008:
Thus, though we cannot make our sun
- Page 1009 and 1010:
I like a cigar, but every now and a
- Page 1011 and 1012:
Firewood, ironware, and cheap tin t
- Page 1013 and 1014:
practised at spare moments; it is a
- Page 1015 and 1016:
1.105 Dame Nellie Melba (Helen Port
- Page 1017 and 1018:
The saddest life is that of a polit
- Page 1019 and 1020:
‘One of Our Conquerors’ (1891)
- Page 1021 and 1022:
Error has never approached my spiri
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the liberty of action of any of the
- Page 1025 and 1026:
1.125 Alice Duer Miller 1874-1942 I
- Page 1027 and 1028:
‘The House at Pooh Corner’ (192
- Page 1029 and 1030:
‘Winnie-the-Pooh’ (1926) ch. 9
- Page 1031 and 1032:
Were all to-ruffled, and sometimes
- Page 1033 and 1034:
As the gay motes that people the su
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‘L’Allegro’ (1645) l. 25 Spor
- Page 1037 and 1038:
For Lycidas is dead, dead ere his p
- Page 1039 and 1040:
Where thou perhaps under the whelmi
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And let the base of heaven’s deep
- Page 1043 and 1044:
United thoughts and counsels, equal
- Page 1045 and 1046:
And when night Darkens the streets,
- Page 1047 and 1048:
‘Paradise Lost’ (1667) bk. 2, l
- Page 1049 and 1050:
The other shape, If shape it might
- Page 1051 and 1052:
At whose sight all the stars Hide t
- Page 1053 and 1054:
And these the gems of heaven, her s
- Page 1055 and 1056:
Headlong themselves they threw Down
- Page 1057 and 1058:
She fair, divinely fair, fit love f
- Page 1059 and 1060:
‘Paradise Lost’ (1667) bk. 12,
- Page 1061 and 1062:
Of such doctrine never was there sc
- Page 1063 and 1064:
Brought to me like Alcestis from th
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we do injuriously by licensing and
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Laudamus te, benedicimus te, adoram
- Page 1069 and 1070:
Grant them eternal rest, O Lord; an
- Page 1071 and 1072:
saved many an English spinster from
- Page 1073 and 1074:
‘Les femmes savantes’ (1672) ac
- Page 1075 and 1076:
And bigamy, Sir, is a crime!’ ‘
- Page 1077 and 1078:
domestic business is no less import
- Page 1079 and 1080:
1.156 Casimir, Comte de Montrond 17
- Page 1081 and 1082:
Believe me, if all those endearing
- Page 1083 and 1084:
‘National Airs’ (1815) ‘Oft i
- Page 1085 and 1086:
In William Roper ‘The Life of Sir
- Page 1087 and 1088:
Had she come all the way for this,
- Page 1089 and 1090:
1.183 Rogers Morton 1914-79 I’m n
- Page 1091 and 1092:
1.195 Ethel Watts Mumford 1878-1940
- Page 1093 and 1094:
There is no way to peace. Peace is
- Page 1095 and 1096:
There is only one step from the sub
- Page 1097 and 1098:
A billboard lovely as a tree. Perha
- Page 1099 and 1100:
2.13 Emperor Nero A.D. 37-68 Qualis
- Page 1101 and 1102:
It would be a gain to the country w
- Page 1103 and 1104:
2.20 Sir Isaac Newton 1642-1727 If
- Page 1105 and 1106:
2.27 Martin Niemöller 1892-1984 Wh
- Page 1107 and 1108:
Too kind, too kind. On the Order of
- Page 1109 and 1110:
2.39 Alfred Noyes 1880-1958 The win
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All the news that’s fit to print.
- Page 1113 and 1114:
Title of play (written 1940-1; publ
- Page 1115 and 1116:
Journalism and Letters of George Or
- Page 1117 and 1118:
‘Shooting an Elephant’ (1950)
- Page 1119 and 1120:
Of the world for ever, it seems.
- Page 1121 and 1122:
allow it to be savage. ‘Epistulae
- Page 1123 and 1124:
And bugles calling for them from sa
- Page 1125 and 1126:
system. ‘The Age of Reason’ pt.
- Page 1127 and 1128:
What is merit? The opinion one man
- Page 1129 and 1130:
Shivering and sighing And he vows h
- Page 1131 and 1132:
‘Pensèes’ (1670) no. 29 Tout l
- Page 1133 and 1134:
Her ball-dress seemed a breathing m
- Page 1135 and 1136:
Mid pleasures and palaces though we
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Whose flame creeps in at every hole
- Page 1139 and 1140:
which was done there, he looking as
- Page 1141 and 1142:
Live with yourself: get to know how
- Page 1143 and 1144:
Mrs Queen’. Speech to English-Spe
- Page 1145 and 1146:
There is something behind the thron
- Page 1147 and 1148:
not angry with me, for you know who
- Page 1149 and 1150:
Than to love and be loved by me.
- Page 1151 and 1152:
Gentle Dullness ever loves a joke.
- Page 1153 and 1154:
‘Elegy to the Memory of an Unfort
- Page 1155 and 1156:
Sees but a backward steward for the
- Page 1157 and 1158:
As shallow streams run dimpling all
- Page 1159 and 1160:
The hoarse, rough verse should like
- Page 1161 and 1162:
Know then thyself, presume not God
- Page 1163 and 1164:
The worst of madmen is a saint run
- Page 1165 and 1166:
Belinda smil’d, and all the world
- Page 1167 and 1168:
‘The Open Society and its Enemies
- Page 1169 and 1170:
I am worn to a ravelling...I am und
- Page 1171 and 1172:
wrote make it new on his bath tub.
- Page 1173 and 1174:
walked eye-deep in hell believing i
- Page 1175 and 1176:
that much was ominous. With middle-
- Page 1177 and 1178:
Liturgy, to keep the mean between t
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enemies. ‘Morning Prayer’, The
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O God, merciful Father, that despis
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thy governance, that thy Church may
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Because it is requisite, that no ma
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all the sinful lusts of the flesh.
- Page 1189 and 1190:
our dear brother here departed, we
- Page 1191 and 1192:
At the brightness of his presence h
- Page 1193 and 1194:
The Lord is my light, and my salvat
- Page 1195 and 1196:
ock, and ordered my goings. Psalm 4
- Page 1197 and 1198:
For lo, the kings of the earth: are
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Psalm 62, v. 4 As for the children
- Page 1201 and 1202:
The mountains also shall bring peac
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As soon as thou scatterest them the
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They shall perish, but thou shalt e
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they would be. Psalm 107, v. 27 The
- Page 1209 and 1210:
Our soul is escaped even as a bird
- Page 1211 and 1212:
Psalm 141, v. 11 Enter not into jud
- Page 1213 and 1214:
dangerous deceits. ‘Articles of R
- Page 1215 and 1216:
And they have my whimsies, but thou
- Page 1217 and 1218:
Laus erit: in magnis et voluisse sa
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The true paradises are paradises we
- Page 1221 and 1222:
There was an old owl lived in an oa
- Page 1223 and 1224:
Ev’n at the brink of danger; not
- Page 1225 and 1226:
6.2 Jean Racine 1639-99 Je l’ai t
- Page 1227 and 1228:
‘Devonshire’ p. 261. Even such
- Page 1229 and 1230:
pederasty—whatever the French bel
- Page 1231 and 1232:
‘Lessons of the War: 3, Unarmed C
- Page 1233 and 1234:
In the factory we make cosmetics; i
- Page 1235 and 1236:
Prove to me that you’re no fool W
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Nun danket alle Gott, Mit Herzen, M
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‘Dèclaration des droits de l’h
- Page 1241 and 1242:
I’ll change a mistress till I’m
- Page 1243 and 1244:
By form assisted, flew from thy emb
- Page 1245 and 1246:
6.71 Mme Roland 1754-93 O libertè!
- Page 1247 and 1248:
wars. Undelivered address for Jeffe
- Page 1249 and 1250:
Was but a dream; and now I wake, Ex
- Page 1251 and 1252:
They die not,—for their life was
- Page 1253 and 1254:
Le jour de gloire est arrivè... Au
- Page 1255 and 1256:
Oh! we don’t want to lose you but
- Page 1257 and 1258:
without labour is base. ‘Time and
- Page 1259 and 1260:
enjoying themselves, or, more gener
- Page 1261 and 1262:
And Vigny more discreet, as if in h
- Page 1263 and 1264:
‘The Catcher in the Rye’ (1951)
- Page 1265 and 1266:
7.14 Lord Samuel (Herbert Louis, fi
- Page 1267 and 1268:
Music is essentially useless, as li
- Page 1269 and 1270:
I confused things with their names:
- Page 1271 and 1272:
‘On Passing the New Menin Gate’
- Page 1273 and 1274:
In Robin Morgan ‘Sisterhood is Po
- Page 1275 and 1276:
He is gone on the mountain, He is l
- Page 1277 and 1278:
‘Marmion’ (1808) canto 5, st. 1
- Page 1279 and 1280:
Come open your gates, and let me ga
- Page 1281 and 1282:
From whence his mother rose. ‘Lov
- Page 1283 and 1284:
her heart. ‘1066 and All That’
- Page 1285 and 1286:
7.62 Thomas Shadwell c.1642-92 Word
- Page 1287 and 1288:
Antony: Then must thou needs find o
- Page 1289 and 1290:
O’er-picturing that Venus where w
- Page 1291 and 1292:
To follow with allegiance a fall’
- Page 1293 and 1294:
Cleopatra: So it should be, that no
- Page 1295 and 1296:
I wish you all joy of the worm. ‘
- Page 1297 and 1298:
And churlish chiding of the winter
- Page 1299 and 1300:
‘As You Like It’ (1599) act 2,
- Page 1301 and 1302:
‘As You Like It’ (1599) act 3,
- Page 1303 and 1304:
‘As You Like It’ (1599) act 5,
- Page 1305 and 1306:
Hath virgined it e’er since. ‘C
- Page 1307 and 1308:
Can snore upon the flint when resty
- Page 1309 and 1310:
The bird of dawning singeth all nig
- Page 1311 and 1312:
It is not, nor it cannot come to go
- Page 1313 and 1314:
You must not take for fire. ‘Haml
- Page 1315 and 1316:
To prick and sting her. ‘Hamlet
- Page 1317 and 1318:
But keep a farm, and carters. ‘Ha
- Page 1319 and 1320:
What’s Hecuba to him or he to Hec
- Page 1321 and 1322:
‘Hamlet’ (1601) act 3, sc. 1, l
- Page 1323 and 1324:
We that have free souls, it touches
- Page 1325 and 1326:
Stewed in corruption, honeying and
- Page 1327 and 1328:
And his sandal shoon. ‘Hamlet’
- Page 1329 and 1330:
There is no ancient gentlemen but g
- Page 1331 and 1332:
Then, venom, to thy work. ‘Hamlet
- Page 1333 and 1334:
‘Henry IV, Part 1’ (1597) act 1
- Page 1335 and 1336:
‘Henry IV, Part 1’ (1597) act 2
- Page 1337 and 1338:
Heard, not regarded. ‘Henry IV, P
- Page 1339 and 1340:
Fare thee well, great heart! Ill-we
- Page 1341 and 1342:
To build at all? ‘Henry IV, Part
- Page 1343 and 1344:
carved upon it with a knife. ‘Hen
- Page 1345 and 1346:
Where, for anything I know, Falstaf
- Page 1347 and 1348:
‘Henry V’ (1599) act 2, sc. 3,
- Page 1349 and 1350:
Yet sit and see; Minding true thing
- Page 1351 and 1352:
Will stand a tip-toe when this day
- Page 1353 and 1354:
And of it made his son imperial lor
- Page 1355 and 1356:
‘Henry VI, Part 2’ (1592) act 4
- Page 1357 and 1358:
There had made a lasting spring. Ev
- Page 1359 and 1360:
Of an unbounded stomach. ‘Henry V
- Page 1361 and 1362:
I had as lief not be as live to be
- Page 1363 and 1364:
Yesterday the bird of night did sit
- Page 1365 and 1366:
‘Julius Caesar’ (1599) act 2, s
- Page 1367 and 1368:
‘Julius Caesar’ (1599) act 3, s
- Page 1369 and 1370:
O! now you weep, and I perceive you
- Page 1371 and 1372:
‘Julius Caesar’ (1599) act 4, s
- Page 1373 and 1374:
For new-made honour doth forget men
- Page 1375 and 1376:
But when it first did help to wound
- Page 1377 and 1378:
‘King Lear’ (1605-6) act 1, sc.
- Page 1379 and 1380:
‘King Lear’ (1605-6) act 3, sc.
- Page 1381 and 1382:
As flies to wanton boys, are we to
- Page 1383 and 1384:
‘King Lear’ (1605-6) act 4, sc.
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That honour which shall bate his sc
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Still climbing trees in the Hesperi
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Third Witch: There to meet with Mac
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‘Macbeth’ (1606) act 1, sc. 3,
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Your hand, your tongue: look like t
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‘Macbeth’ (1606) act 2, sc. 1,
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Who’s there i’ the other devil
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That I would set my life on any cha
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In the poisoned entrails throw. Toa
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lord, fie! a soldier, and afeard? W
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And wish the estate o’ the world
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‘Measure for Measure’ (1604) ac
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That age, ache, penury, and impriso
- Page 1411 and 1412:
With purpose to be dressed in an op
- Page 1413 and 1414:
And spet upon my Jewish gabardine,
- Page 1415 and 1416:
‘The Merchant of Venice’ (1596-
- Page 1417 and 1418:
That ever blotted paper! ‘The Mer
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For, as thou urgest justice, be ass
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7.66.22 The Merry Wives of Windsor
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Things base and vile, holding no qu
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I know a bank whereon the wild thym
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Methought I was enamoured of an ass
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That you have but slumbered here Wh
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No glory lives behind the back of s
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‘Othello’ (1602-4) act 1, sc. 1
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When I did speak of some distressfu
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Desdemona: O most lame and impotent
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‘Othello’ (1602-4) act 3, sc. 3
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They are not ever jealous for the c
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And his unkindness may defeat my li
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And you the blacker devil. ‘Othel
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Old John of Gaunt, time-honour’d
- Page 1449 and 1450:
With inky blots, and rotten parchme
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My subjects for a pair of carved sa
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After a well-graced actor leaves th
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As ’twere in scorn of eyes, refle
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‘Romeo And Juliet’ (1595) act 1
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Deny thy father, and refuse thy nam
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I am the very pink of courtesy. ‘
- Page 1463 and 1464:
I have a faint cold fear thrills th
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‘The Taming Of The Shrew’ (1592
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Allaying both their fury, and my pa
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Our revels now are ended. These our
- Page 1471 and 1472:
Their fears of hostile strokes, the
- Page 1473 and 1474:
Unfit to hear moral philosophy. ‘
- Page 1475 and 1476:
Hector is dead; there is no more to
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Lady, you are the cruell’st she a
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Than women’s are. ‘Twelfth Nigh
- Page 1481 and 1482:
‘Twelfth Night’ (1601) act 3, s
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Why have you suffered me to be impr
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‘The Two Gentlemen Of Verona’ (
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The winds of March with beauty; vio
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And now this pale swan in her water
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And trouble deaf heaven with my boo
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Save, where you are, how happy you
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So thy great gift, upon misprision
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Distilled from limbecks foul as hel
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Save a proud rider on so proud a ba
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‘Everybody’s Political What’s
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Englishmen never will be slaves: th
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patriotic principles; he robs you o
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If otherwise wish I. Poem (1916) in
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Envy and calumny and hate and pain,
- Page 1511 and 1512:
Like wrecks of a dissolving dream.
- Page 1513 and 1514:
Now is come a darker day, And thou
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Be through my lips to unawakened ea
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To forgive wrongs darker than death
- Page 1519 and 1520:
The devotion to something afar From
- Page 1521 and 1522:
A single word even may be a spark o
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‘The Rivals’ (1775) act 3, sc.
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I presume you’re mortal, and may
- Page 1527 and 1528:
Tempers her words to trampling hors
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7.95 N. F. Simpson 1919— Knocked
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She is the violet, The daisy delect
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On what a charity ye come To bless
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As respects the great contrivances
- Page 1537 and 1538:
Smith: It is not for me, Your Honou
- Page 1539 and 1540:
‘Not Waving but Drowning’ (1957
- Page 1541 and 1542:
And, scarce-suspected, animate the
- Page 1543 and 1544:
from hence to there may be blessed;
- Page 1545 and 1546:
That you’ll remember. For you nee
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‘The Doctor’ (1812) ch. 17 Show
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A clever theft was praiseworthy amo
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My verse your virtues rare shall et
- Page 1553 and 1554:
Gather the rose of love, whilst yet
- Page 1555 and 1556:
That even the gentle stream, the wh
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She’s the Broad and I’m the Hig
- Page 1559 and 1560:
A self-made man is one who believes
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I knew that once: but now—I think
- Page 1563 and 1564:
‘Tristram Shandy’ (1759-67) bk.
- Page 1565 and 1566:
‘Bantams in Pine Woods’ (1923)
- Page 1567 and 1568:
The body dies; the body’s beauty
- Page 1569 and 1570:
The bright face of danger. ‘Acros
- Page 1571 and 1572:
‘Virginibus Puerisque’ (1881)
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Let the blow fall soon or late, Let
- Page 1575 and 1576:
7.173 Caskie Stinnett 1911— A dip
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Discretion is not the better part o
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At length the candle’s out, and n
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ibs I gives Mrs J when I think they
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however this be, his Majesty hath d
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‘A Tale of a Tub’ (1704) ch. 9
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Hobbes clearly proves, that every c
- Page 1589 and 1590:
Blossom by blossom the spring begin
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‘Hymn of Man’ Glory to Man in t
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‘A man who is not afraid of the s
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‘Fireflies’ (1928) p. 29 8.3 Ne
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Establishment. ‘Essays in English
- Page 1599 and 1600:
Personally, I have always looked on
- Page 1601 and 1602:
Close to the sun in lonely lands, R
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‘Idylls of the King’ (1842-85)
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And every marge enclosing in the mi
- Page 1607 and 1608:
The sad mechanic exercise, Like dul
- Page 1609 and 1610:
The great world’s altar-stairs Th
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Ring in the Christ that is to be.
- Page 1613 and 1614:
Thick-jewelled shone the saddle-lea
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Than labour in the deep mid-ocean,
- Page 1617 and 1618:
And a hush with the setting moon.
- Page 1619 and 1620:
Who never sold the truth to serve t
- Page 1621 and 1622:
Deep as first love, and wild with a
- Page 1623 and 1624:
But I cannot meet them here, for my
- Page 1625 and 1626:
By this still hearth, among these b
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Lovers’ rows make love whole agai
- Page 1629 and 1630:
‘Vanity Fair’ (1847-8) ch. 36 (
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‘De Imitatione Christi’ bk. 3,
- Page 1633 and 1634:
My birthday Away but the weather tu
- Page 1635 and 1636:
in the climate of our conception?
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(O filigree petal!) Fashioned so pu
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‘The Seasons’ (1728) ‘Winter
- Page 1641 and 1642:
The three-o’-clock in the morning
- Page 1643 and 1644:
Nature is always wise in every part
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eat: it was a hobbit-hole, and that
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The state of both his universities,
- Page 1649 and 1650:
The comic almanacs give us dreadful
- Page 1651 and 1652:
Where force is necessary, there it
- Page 1653 and 1654:
Truth is the most valuable thing we
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‘A Tramp Abroad’ (1880) ch. 8 A
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Un poéme n’est jamais achevè—
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Wise Nicodemus saw such light As ma
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10.12 Thorstein Veblen 1857-1929 Co
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I will be good. On being shown a ch
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I sing of arms and the man who firs
- Page 1667 and 1668:
How greatly changed from that Hecto
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longing for the further shore. ‘A
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whole world. ‘Eclogue’ no. 1, l
- Page 1673 and 1674:
Me too the Muses made write verse.
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Ils ne se servent de la pensèe que
- Page 1677 and 1678:
11.0 W Attributed to Voltaire, the
- Page 1679 and 1680:
Illustrious acts high raptures do i
- Page 1681 and 1682:
Letter to Mason, 12 June 1775, in
- Page 1683 and 1684:
‘The Compleat Angler’ (1653) pt
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with. ‘Science and Natural Histor
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From every opening flower! ‘Again
- Page 1689 and 1690:
eneficed clergyman and need not com
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Sidney would remark, ‘I know just
- Page 1693 and 1694:
‘The White Devil’ (1612) act 1,
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The British are coming. Speech acce
- Page 1697 and 1698:
Stanhope ‘Notes of Conversations
- Page 1699 and 1700:
‘Rule of Conduct’ in ‘Letters
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The byrdes sang swete in the middes
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Democracy is the recurrent suspicio
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I dreamed that was the new city of
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I have said that the soul is not mo
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‘Barbara Frietchie’ l. 41 For a
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I never saw a man who looked With s
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‘The Importance of Being Earnest
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Children begin by loving their pare
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ugs stand as if amazed. ‘How To B
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11.98 Nathaniel Parker Willis 1806-
- Page 1721 and 1722:
11.106 McLandburgh Wilson 1892—
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11.112 William Windham 1750-1810 Th
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‘The Code of the Woosters’ (193
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11.123 Thomas Wolfe 1900-38 Most of
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them pass, but the 3rd 4th 5th 6th
- Page 1731 and 1732:
To express what then I saw; and add
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’Tis my delight, alone in summer
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‘Laodamia’ (1815) l. 103 I have
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What, you are stepping westward?
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Our birth is but a sleep and a forg
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‘Ode. Intimations of Immortality
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I heard among the solitary hills Lo
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And clearest insight, amplitude of
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For transient sorrows, simple wiles
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And shaped these pleasant walks by
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That poorly satisfy our eyes, More
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11.144 Andrew Of Wyntoun c.1350-c.1
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Out of old mythologies From heel to
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Wherever green is worn, Are changed
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A shudder in the loins engenders th
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That young men, tossing on their be
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World-besotted traveller; he Served
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What lively lad most pleasured me O
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‘The Complaint: Night Thoughts’
- Page 1769:
Don’t go on looking at me like th
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