Shakespeare Proverbs; Or, The Wise Saws of Our Wisest Poet Collected Into a Modern InstanceG.P. Putnam's Sons, 1908 - 320 sider |
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Side 3
... look with which I regarded John Keats , as he leaned against the side of the organ , listening with rapt attention to my father's music . Keats's favourite posi- tion - one foot raised on the other knee -still remains imprinted on my ...
... look with which I regarded John Keats , as he leaned against the side of the organ , listening with rapt attention to my father's music . Keats's favourite posi- tion - one foot raised on the other knee -still remains imprinted on my ...
Side 47
... look on the dark side , and to agree with Shakespeare , or Mark Antony , who utters these despondent words ; but when we are in a more healthy and hopeful frame of mind we believe , with the later poet , that in the long run good will ...
... look on the dark side , and to agree with Shakespeare , or Mark Antony , who utters these despondent words ; but when we are in a more healthy and hopeful frame of mind we believe , with the later poet , that in the long run good will ...
Side 48
... Look before you leap ' balanced by ' Nothing venture , nothing have ; ' ' A rolling stone gathers no moss ' by ' A sitting hen never gets fat ; ' ' Take care of the pence , and the pounds will take care of themselves ' by Penny - wise ...
... Look before you leap ' balanced by ' Nothing venture , nothing have ; ' ' A rolling stone gathers no moss ' by ' A sitting hen never gets fat ; ' ' Take care of the pence , and the pounds will take care of themselves ' by Penny - wise ...
Side 58
... look up other definitions of this group of words , he will find the confusion only the worse confounded . The lexicographers treat the terms as loosely as common folk do or the cultivated and literary , for that matter . Have done with ...
... look up other definitions of this group of words , he will find the confusion only the worse confounded . The lexicographers treat the terms as loosely as common folk do or the cultivated and literary , for that matter . Have done with ...
Side 93
... look with thine ears . Lear , iv . 6 . Lear , iv . 6 . A dog's obeyed in office . At lovers ' perjuries , they say , Jove laughs . Rom . and Jul . ii . 2 . An old man is twice a child . Hamlet , ii . 2 . Assume a virtue , if you have it ...
... look with thine ears . Lear , iv . 6 . Lear , iv . 6 . A dog's obeyed in office . At lovers ' perjuries , they say , Jove laughs . Rom . and Jul . ii . 2 . An old man is twice a child . Hamlet , ii . 2 . Assume a virtue , if you have it ...
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Shakespeare Proverbs: Or, The Wise Saws of Our Wisest Poet Collected Into a ... William Shakespeare,Mary Cowden Clarke Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1848 |
Shakespeare Proverbs: Or, The Wise Saws of Our Wisest Poet Collected Into a ... William Shakespeare,Mary Cowden Clarke Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1848 |
Shakespeare Proverbs: Or the Wise Saws of Our Wisest Poet Collected Into a ... Mary Cowden Clarke Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2018 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
adage All's Andron aphorism Athens bear beauty better blood Cæsar Cleo Compare Coriol Coriolanus Cowden Cymbeline death deeds devil doth edition Errors evil eyes fair faults fear fire folly fond fool foul gods gold grief Hamlet hanging hath heart Henry IV Henry VI Henry VIII honour John kings L. L. Lost ladies Lamb Lear lives look Love's Lover's Complaint Lucrece M. N. Dream Macbeth MARY COWDEN-CLARKE Mary Lamb maxim means Meas men's Merry Wives mind nature ne'er never Night Novello Othello passage Pericles play poet poor praise proverb quoted reader referred rich Richard Richard II says scape sense Shake Shakespeare shew Shrew Sonnet Sonnet 70 sorrow soul speare sport sweet sweetest T. G. of Ver Tale Tempest thee There's things thou thought tongue true truth verb virtue wear wisdom wise saws words