| Gilbert Burnet (bp. of Salisbury.) - 1833 - 458 pages
...I ne'er had been. And thus, while I shall pass my silent days In shady privacy, free from the noise And bustles of the mad world, then shall I A good...to all, But unacquainted with himself doth fall.* * ' Certainly, men in great fortunel are ttrangert to themselves ; an* while they are in the puzzle... | |
| John Bickerton Williams - 1835 - 618 pages
...I ne'er had been. And thus, while I shall pass my silent days In shady privacy, free from the noise And bustles of the mad world, then shall I, A good...to all, But unacquainted with himself doth fall." " Sir Richard Rainsford12 succeeded Lord Hale: and when the commission was delivered to him, he was... | |
| John Bickerton Williams - 1835 - 474 pages
...I ne'er had been. And thus, while I shall pass my silent days In shady privacy, free from the noise And bustles of the mad world, then shall I, A good...very snare To him that makes it his life's greatest eare, To be a publ1c pageant ; known to all, But unacqua1nted with himself doth fall." n Sir Richard... | |
| John Bickerton Williams - 1835 - 440 pages
...free from the noise And bustles of the mad world, then shall I, U A good old innocent plebeian, die. C Death is a mere surprise, a very snare > To him that...to all, But unacquainted with himself doth fall." u Sir Richard Rainsford 12 succeeded Lord Hale: 2 and when the commission was delivered to him, he... | |
| Henry Samuel M. Hubert - 1841 - 136 pages
...I ne'er had been. And thus, while I shall pass my silent days In shady privacy, free from the noise And bustles of the mad world, then shall I A good...innocent plebeian die. Death is a mere surprise, a very snaro To him that makes it his life's greatest care To be a public pageant, known to all, But unacquainted... | |
| Henry Godwin - 1842 - 1018 pages
...very snare. To hnn that makes it his life's greatest care. * EpUt. 64, s. 1. THE ROMANS IN BRITAIN. To be a public pageant ; known to all, But unacquainted with himself doth fall.* •The above extract, from the Tragedyof Thyestes, is from the translation by Judge Hale, who, on his... | |
| Malachi Mouldy (pseud.) - 1844 - 302 pages
...mean obscure recess — a sphere Out of the road of business — or the fear Of falling lower, &c. Death is a mere surprise, a very snare, To him that makes it his life's greatest care. * Epist. 64, s. 1. t De Ira., lib. iII., c. 36. To be a public pageant ; known to all, But unacquainted... | |
| 1845 - 952 pages
...of the world, then shall I A good old innoceut plebeian die. Death is a mere surprise, a very,snare To him that makes it his life's greatest care To be...known to all, But unacquainted with himself doth fall. REVIEWS. The Doctrine of Original Sin ; or, The Native State and Character of Man Unfolded. By George... | |
| John Campbell Baron Campbell - 1849 - 620 pages
...ne'er had been. And thus, while I shall pass my silent days In shady privacy, free from the noise* And bustles of the mad world, then shall I, A good...to all, But, unacquainted with himself, doth fall." In a few days his malady returned with aggravation, and his breathing became so bad, that he was never... | |
| John Campbell Baron Campbell - 1853 - 466 pages
...been. And thus, while I shall pass my silent days In shady privacy, free from the noise' And bustle of the mad world, then shall I, A good old innocent...to all, But, unacquainted with himself, doth fall." In a few days his malady returned with aggravation, and his breathing became so bad, that he was never... | |
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