This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
A45166 | I''th''Street he greets his Friend with chearful Eyes, And hugging Close, when will you come? |
A16681 | He proclaimes his shadow to be a protection to all; but who is hee would chuse such a harbour to pay for his lodging with a scracht face? |
A16733 | Breton, Nicholas, 1545?-1626? |
A16733 | Breton, Nicholas, 1545?-1626? |
A16733 | Say; is this Spirit a Plebeyan? |
A16748 | Breton, Nicholas, 1545?-1626? |
A16748 | Breton, Nicholas, 1545?-1626? |
A84694 | And for private ends how many be there that long for fighting, because they live by it? |
A84694 | David once in wisdome play''d the Fool, to deliver himself: and why may not I once play the fool, to deliver my conscience, in a free reproof? |
A84694 | If Religion that is the foundation of a Kingdom be taken away, what can be expected, but ruine of the whole building? |
A84694 | Si fundamentum tollitur, quid nisi ruina expectatur? |
A84694 | Where is now the man that would lay downe his private grudges, rather then engage the Kingdom in a publike Quarrell? |
A11388 | But that they prosper''d who can e''re remember, When youthfull May was match''t with cold December? |
A11388 | For this once lost, who can againe repaire? |
A11388 | Or who can make words trusted to the aire, Revert unto their owner backe againe? |
A11388 | SOme jealous braine may here demand in haste, Can this Mayd that''s so vendible be chaste? |
A11388 | That stands t''allure her Lovers on each Stall, Her liberall beauty so expos''d to all? |
A11388 | Who can call backe the quicke thoughts of the braine? |
A39707 | ''Cause from thee Time thy good looks takes, Must I needs the ● efore have thy ill? |
A39707 | Flecknoe, Richard, d. 1678? |
A39707 | Flecknoe, Richard, d. 1678? |
A39707 | He asks you so often how you do? |
A39707 | How happy shud we mortals be? |
A39707 | NOw what a Devil, Misa, makes Thee with such Eyes behold me still? |
A39707 | WHen he meets you, he asks you with a great deal of joy, whether you be there or no? |
A39707 | as he makes you doubt whether you be well or no; and when you are not indeed, he is more troublesome yet, with his how d''ye''s? |
A39706 | And what wouldst thou give for the Key now of these Characters? |
A39706 | But what do I talk of a guard? |
A39706 | Flecknoe, Richard, d. 1678? |
A39706 | Flecknoe, Richard, d. 1678? |
A39706 | Their chiefest game is who, and who? |
A39706 | What will become of us? |
A39706 | how say ye by that now? |
A39706 | what shall I doe? |
A68130 | Burning? |
A68130 | Deuouring? |
A68130 | Drowning? |
A68130 | Heading? |
A68130 | Is he threatned banishment? |
A68130 | Stoning? |
A68130 | What hath God giuen which hee can not giue? |
A68130 | What haue others suffered which hee may not be enabled to indure? |
A68130 | What need we more than to discouer these two to the world? |
A68130 | When a present is sent him, he asks Is this all? |
A68130 | When he should giue, he looks about him, and sayes WHO SEES ME? |
A68130 | and What no better? |
A68130 | but, What if I runne ouer and fall not? |
A96944 | And know we not, God is more wise by far, And more indulgent then our parents are? |
A96944 | Are we not happyest when we least desire, And nothing that''s below the sunne admire? |
A96944 | Art thou imprison''d? |
A96944 | Art thou injur''d? |
A96944 | HAve you observ''d a Cedar wonderous straight? |
A96944 | How many Scotch Bawbies, cast in account, Would to the Talents David left amount? |
A96944 | I Lov''d thee dearly Brother I confesse; And shall I now begin to love thee lesse? |
A96944 | If Sheba paid his head for his tongues fault, what deserves Britanicus to pay for his pen and trumpet? |
A96944 | Is there never a wise woman in London? |
A96944 | My length but halfe a foote, my Body small, How could I stay Ships, under sayle so tall? |
A96944 | What are our sinnes when such as Lindsey fall? |
A96944 | Who is''t hath done the cause more right, then they? |
A96944 | Why should that rich tombe Cleopatra please, Since Vipers have such noble tombes as these? |
A96944 | Why should we vex at Salmons guiltles thunder, Since emulous man, hath framed a greater wonder? |
A96944 | Would he submit himselfe to Caesars Law, Who was a King? |
A96944 | must not his subjects draw? |
A96944 | what can subjects say? |
A02441 | ''Pray why not? |
A02441 | Did he no debts pay? |
A02441 | HOw should Rattillo lose his purse last night, And 20. shillings in it? |
A02441 | He owed him the reckoning but of late: Hath he not scored, and payd him on the pate? |
A02441 | Her Case was ill: yet will the question be, Being thus declin''d, in what a case was she? |
A02441 | I Asked Pratus what was his Profession? |
A02441 | If so? |
A02441 | Is that so strange? |
A02441 | None must come to offer A Widdowes mite: For how should liue the Scribes, But by false profits, and by double bribes? |
A02441 | Nor Fee no Lawyers? |
A02441 | Nor did bestow it on his Punke? |
A02441 | Pay Tribute to a troubled heart, T''is but a teare before you part: And what are teares? |
A02441 | Prethee who is that That weares you great greene Fether in his hat, Like to some Tilter? |
A02441 | Some say he did it in the Deuils name, And none ere since could doe the like againe: But these are al deceiued, why should they doubt it? |
A02441 | These are confuted all, and held as vaine, In eighteene Moneths they now returne againe: Returne a gaine said I? |
A02441 | WHat bootes it thee to follow such a Trade That''s alwayes vnderfoote and vnderlayde? |
A02441 | WHy should Cornutus Wife lie in the Strand, And hee, poore silly man, lye in the Citie? |
A02441 | Was he not drunk? |
A02441 | What if he lyes? |
A02441 | What, did he Venter with his goods his wits, That he is falne into these franticke fits? |
A02441 | What, did hee play? |
A02441 | Who could but laugh, to see the little Dwarfe Grace out himselfe with her imbrodered Scarfe? |
A02441 | Why, then the question''s this; If none of these, How should he lose what he had not to leese? |
A02441 | Why? |
A02441 | it''s a Paradox to mee, How being the woorse, he can the better bee? |
A02441 | should I send Thee, like a Seruingman, with Letters? |
A02441 | was''t not by slight? |
A02441 | what thogh the Smith were black,& she were white, She might haue ask''t him leaue, for leaue is light: Why so is she, what then? |
A02441 | why was it naught? |
A12956 | And doth not the bloud of common heires answere to a Kings priuiledge, in the Title of Legitimate? |
A12956 | And shall wee wonder if it choakes him, when he deuoures all? |
A12956 | And why? |
A12956 | Aske shifting Russians why they do forget, To hasten payment and discharge their debt, Or why they do sufficient men dislike? |
A12956 | Directly? |
A12956 | Doth he not then his credit much deface? |
A12956 | Doth he recover credit then, or saue Opinion kept perhaps aboue desert? |
A12956 | For who in Vertues troope was euer seene, That did couragiously with mischiefes fight Without the publicke name of hipocrite? |
A12956 | I will not wrong their holinesse: and why? |
A12956 | No question is to bee made of her maiden- head: yet if she weepes, a question may arise; as whether she doth still desire to keepe it? |
A12956 | Now haue you ended? |
A12956 | Or how shall wee condemne, if they bee mercilessely ouerthrowne by the impulsiue necessity of destruction? |
A12956 | So: Haue you done( deere Motley?) |
A12956 | The last will neuer be good; so long as people do but conduct their fauorites to the Scaffold, and cry Alas, it is pitty; but who can helpe it? |
A12956 | What if some others will thy feast abuse, Because it is of seu''rall kindes? |
A12956 | When I pronounce a Coward, it implies, Malice and spight be Cowards qualities: They are inseparate, and why? |
A12956 | Who rather gainefull vices do cond ● mne, Because they can not purchase gaines by them? |
A12956 | Why crost? |
A12956 | Why do I taxe, why do I trouble men, Or why with noted crimes defile my pen? |
A12956 | Why then shall wee protect such vniust partialitie? |
A12956 | Yet will you dare to say those men exact? |
A12956 | go aske authoritie Why it protects peculiar vanitie? |
A12956 | or what thankes and filiall loue may Fathers expect from such Children, more then from good Apprentices? |
A12956 | refuse The founders dignitie, because ti ● knowne Mens tastes and palates onely be their owne? |
A12956 | what satisfaction can, Written reproofes be for a vicious man? |
A12956 | why curb''d? |
A16687 | Againe, how remisse and conniving, if hee perceive no such thing intended? |
A16687 | An Exchange ▪ man IS the peremptorie br ● … nch of an Intergatorie; What do 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A16687 | And his aymes miserably cloz''d? |
A16687 | And scrue himselfe into his knowledge in servilest manner? |
A16687 | B[ostock?]." |
A16687 | But how officious the Snake will bee, where hee smels benefit? |
A16687 | But what more powerfully prevalent than error? |
A16687 | But where findes hee any such in all our Collect ● …? |
A16687 | By this, hee falls further; whence a P ● … danticall 〈 ◊ 〉 starts up, and askes him; What sayes th ● … Pr ● … phet? |
A16687 | Doe you heare yo ● … New- gate bird? |
A16687 | Frustrate the States expectance? |
A16687 | H ● … s morni ● … g preparative is, What sconce shall we build? |
A16687 | Heyday; what a racket hee keepes? |
A16687 | His fortunes distilled? |
A16687 | How he will mould him to his temper? |
A16687 | How hee tyres himselfe in a wilde- goose- chase? |
A16687 | How his hopes are thawed? |
A16687 | How hot he is in palat, but how cold at heart? |
A16687 | How like a sillie man hee lookes in the presence of his wife and a proper attendant? |
A16687 | How much is the State deceiv''d in this greatmans master- peece? |
A16687 | How much may one houres remissnesse prejudice this consequent businesse? |
A16687 | In a word, bee our you ● … g Novices affected to play? |
A16687 | Now will any one buy a kettle, a Caldron, or a Limbeck? |
A16687 | Shall we then close with him thus? |
A16687 | Sometimes hee will expostulate his wrongs himselfe, and say; Well; what remedy? |
A16687 | The Embleme of him is exprest in the hollow- chamell voyce of that walking Trunkhos''d goblin, any ends of gold or siluer? |
A16687 | The argument of their learned conference is this; Where shall we suppe, or how shall we trifle away this night? |
A16687 | The first question he askes you,( for else he ha''s none materiall) Where is your Commission? |
A16687 | Wha ● … a dejected eye hee casts upon himselfe, and how ● … lous he is of this strangers Count''nance? |
A16687 | What Cringes he will make to a rising favorite? |
A16687 | What a rubbi ● … g and scrubbing hee will make in hope of a small reward at cloze of a reckoning? |
A16687 | What aboundance of zeale hee will pretend among the zealous? |
A16687 | What great matter is it, though it cost him a Muffe, a wrought Wastcoate, or some curious Border? |
A16687 | What humble Obeysance may you expect at his hand, when he prostrates himselfe in such low service to the heeles of your Horse? |
A16687 | What indifferency among our Timists? |
A16687 | What is wanting then but thy equall acceptance? |
A16687 | What remaines now, but that hee alien himselfe from the world, seeing what he had in the world is aliened from him? |
A16687 | What rests then, but that hee rest after his long Walke? |
A16687 | What will this Puffin come to in time? |
A16687 | When the Sessions draw neere, how officio ● … sly obsequious he is to any o ● … his well- lin''d Prisoners? |
A16687 | Where shall we meete to morrow; or how bestow our selves? |
A16687 | With ● … hat c ● … pt he 〈 ◊ 〉 ● … com ● … ▪ Co ● … gie? |
A16687 | Would you have a true survey of his family, and number them by the pole? |
A09036 | A Booke of Epigrams, and made by me? |
A09036 | ASk Lettice where she lyes; she''ll say in Towne, But( Lettice) whereabouts? |
A09036 | Abjicis ista ferus? |
A09036 | And nere cast vp th''account which thou must giue For such thy wealths abusiue vsurpation? |
A09036 | And not obserue he''s growne an Officer, That lookes for adoration ten times more? |
A09036 | And wilt not such presumption reconcile, But vex her with thy vilenesse more and more? |
A09036 | BE prouder still( young Spruso) spite of foes; What? |
A09036 | BEsse wins all outward praise can set her forth, But closely trades: then what''s all praises worth? |
A09036 | But time she doubts not will ere long procure it,( As were she laid once) thinke you shee le endure it? |
A09036 | COuld Bond the Scrivener find no time to come To Sr. Iohn Opus, but on''s physick day, When he should take a purge? |
A09036 | DAcus with Surgeons deales, but what of that? |
A09036 | DOd drinks not but at meals,& why d''ye think? |
A09036 | FIe on thee Fabius, one of thy faire meanes And found a bed with filthy Oyster queanes? |
A09036 | For why? |
A09036 | GOod cause had Gluto for himselfe to say, Shall not these glories last but for a day? |
A09036 | GRace I confesse it, hath a comely face, Good hand and foot as answerable to it: But what''s all this, except she had more grace? |
A09036 | HAnd off Sir Sauce- box: Think you Mrs Phips Allowes such Lobs as you to touch her lips? |
A09036 | HOw comes it Caius liues so en ● ved at? |
A09036 | HOw comes it Calvus liuing long by vse, Should now in''s latter dayes proue so profuse? |
A09036 | HOw durst you call in question mistris Maud, Because her name a little was disgrac''d? |
A09036 | Hang him base scum, Is that a time when men their debts should pay? |
A09036 | How may that be? |
A09036 | IAnus hath studied long to break a iest Vpon these rimes, he doth so much detest, And can you blame him? |
A09036 | IEnkin must needs proue Gentleman, and why? |
A09036 | LVscus that lately so much brawne did eate, Was told by him that gaue it; You friend mine Know you what longeth to such kind of meat? |
A09036 | MAdge at fifteen a mayd? |
A09036 | MArk but how vpstart yong Mercutio iets it: Wold not a man much wōder how he gets it? |
A09036 | MAt will not marry: true, cause ty''d to none, He may haue wēches new, whē th''old are gone Quid fatuis? |
A09036 | MOnseur Patricius is to Venice gone, What to do there think you? |
A09036 | Must she proue packhorse for all kind of men? |
A09036 | Must that conclude her ere the more vnchast? |
A09036 | NOt chaste nor secret Calvus? |
A09036 | Or wherefore she so oft her lodging shifts, But that he would be leud? |
A09036 | POntus by no meanes from his coyne departs, Zfut will ye haue of men more then their harts? |
A09036 | PRu proues a faire, but not a proper woman, True, for how can she proper be that''s commō? |
A09036 | SAy Mal be but a Chambermaid, what then? |
A09036 | SAy prethee( Lusco) where didst lodge last night? |
A09036 | SIl can not sleepe at nights, and wote you why? |
A09036 | SToop foul- mouth''d Malcus,& be whipt a while Art not asham''d to call thy mistris whoore? |
A09036 | Say, was he So great a wencher? |
A09036 | Sir( quoth the Sailor) make you that so strange? |
A09036 | Sublata causa,& c. WHy studies Siluester no more the Lawes? |
A09036 | TAssus writes verses vpon great mens praise, And in that exercise spends most his dayes: For whom you''ll aske? |
A09036 | TEll Tom of Platoes worth, or Aristotles? |
A09036 | TEll me Maximius,( prethee) why dost liue, Still to enioy this earthly habitation? |
A09036 | THat Cambro''s wife''s with child, her belly shows it, But who was''t got it? |
A09036 | WAT hath of women won a wondrous name, How mean you? |
A09036 | WHat art thou like( my Lidea) or whereto Shall I compare thee, as I faine would do: Vnto a Swan? |
A09036 | WHat lets thee( Ionathan) thou shouldst not be As honest as thy father? |
A09036 | WHat makes Menalchas to become so proud? |
A09036 | WHat makes yong Brutus bear so high his head And on the sudden gallant it so braue? |
A09036 | WHat makes young Brutus keepe his bed so long, Not being sick? |
A09036 | WHo sayes Tom Tipstaffe is no man of calling, Can any Cryer at Sessions be more bauling? |
A09036 | WHy asks sir Lewes where Mrs Lucresse lyes? |
A09036 | WHy blame you Iaques of so iust a deed, As to prouide for matters necessary? |
A09036 | WHy striues yong Galatea for the wall? |
A09036 | WHy weares Laurentius such a lofty fether? |
A09036 | WHy weares young Iockie such a jinling spur? |
A09036 | WHy wears Wat one boot vp, another down? |
A09036 | WOuld you with Caius offer now confer In such familiar sort as heretofore? |
A09036 | Well, what of that, Hath he not therefore a more reaching pate? |
A09036 | Yes why not( pray) so sudden in his speeches, As he late suddenly beraid his breeches? |
A09036 | a Lilly? |
A09036 | moritur mea Musa dolendo: Accipis ista libens? |
A09036 | must such as we Be no more waited on? |
A09036 | or a Rose? |
A09036 | pull thy selfe already by the nose? |
A09036 | wōdrous in the worser sense? |
A47893 | And are there not also those, who have it thick, which yet is full of them? |
A47893 | And by a miracle which is hardly conceivable, hath he not invested him with a power of creating all things as himself? |
A47893 | And convey the serosities to the skin, in critical sweats? |
A47893 | And how can Grief, for example, be said to excite sadness in the mind, what Sympathy soever may be imagin''d between these powers? |
A47893 | And if so, what shall this pretended Direction do upon all these occasions? |
A47893 | And when one dies, does she not depart out of the body, and remove into some other place? |
A47893 | Are there not some creatures of different species, that have the same Temperament, and yet the figure of their parts is wholy different? |
A47893 | Are there not some kinds of distractions, and extravagances which are called Lunaeies? |
A47893 | Are there not some, whose skin is very delicate and thin, wherein there is not any to be seen? |
A47893 | As also these others, How comes it, that in one Passion they are directed to the forehead, as in Love? |
A47893 | BUt what end does the Soul propose to her self in all these motions? |
A47893 | BUt what? |
A47893 | BUt where shall we find these Habits, and in what part of the Soul are they framed? |
A47893 | But are there not abundance of persons, who have the same constitution of Skin, wherein yet there is not any line like one the others? |
A47893 | But be it granted that they should so disperse themselves, why may they not be nevertheless animate? |
A47893 | But do''s not al this reflect on the Angels as well as on the Soul, who, notwithstanding these reasons, are yet granted to move of themselves? |
A47893 | But how does the Appetite see? |
A47893 | But what, is not the soul dilated when a child grows bigger? |
A47893 | But what? |
A47893 | But what? |
A47893 | But who is it also that can oppose Truth ▪ which is stronger than Beauty? |
A47893 | But with what can they be united so as to participate of the union which is common to the whole body? |
A47893 | Can any knowledg be more delightful or more profitable then these? |
A47893 | Can the Soul animate such a simple and homogenious body as the Spirits are? |
A47893 | How can this be done, unless they be animate? |
A47893 | How comes it then to pass, that it should know the object of a spiritual passion? |
A47893 | How does it know, when it neither sees nor knows any thing but those Images, those judgments and commands being fram''d in the said faculties? |
A47893 | How happens there a greater confluence of them on the ind ● spos''d parts, then on those which are sound and well? |
A47893 | How in another to the eyes, as in Anger? |
A47893 | How in others, to the lower part of the cheeks, and the ears, as in Shame? |
A47893 | How is it to be apprehended, that, contrary to all other qualities, which advance forward, this only should return back? |
A47893 | How shall it cause them to rally about the heart, when they have straggled from it? |
A47893 | How shall it then cause it to ascend to the left nostril, in Inflammations of the Spleen, rather then to the right? |
A47893 | If it be so, this question will arise, How it comes to pass, that some of them go to one place rather then another? |
A47893 | If the case were otherwise, why should she not as well make them for some other member? |
A47893 | Is she not contracted, and restrain''d into a less space, when some members are cut off? |
A47893 | Is there any necessity we should discover things, which Nature hath made it so much her business to conceal? |
A47893 | Moreover, do not the fits of the Epilepsie or Falling- sickness ordinarily follow the motions of that Planet? |
A47893 | Shall it be also the impulsion that shall force choler to the Intestines, in Fluxes without inflammation? |
A47893 | The case being thus laid down, they may be asked, Whether all parts have this vertue equally or not? |
A47893 | The question now is, to know, what part of the Soul gives them their motions, whether the Vegetative or the Sensitive? |
A47893 | We are ignorant of that which we ought to know best? |
A47893 | What advantages can she receive thereby? |
A47893 | What intermixture, or, to say better, what confusion will there not be in the vessels, wherein every part will spread its Magnetick vertue? |
A47893 | What motion can have an incorporeal vertue, to go, and find out, and bring away massy bodies? |
A47893 | What other reason can be assign''d for this regularity, at least such as may be satisfactory to the mind, then that alledged by us? |
A47893 | Whence then proceeds this diversity? |
A47893 | Who can forbear falling in love with Beauty? |
A47893 | Why not, since she animates the radical moisture, the Flesh, the Fibres, and all the other similar parts? |
A47893 | Why should we be so forward to condemn those, who innocently force the adorations and respects of all the world? |
A12957 | An vt pervenias in ora vulgi? |
A12957 | And doth not the bloud of common heires answere to a Kings priuiledge, in the Title of Legitimate? |
A12957 | And repaire A place infected with vnwholsome ayre? |
A12957 | And very wicked brethren? |
A12957 | And what of that sayst thou? |
A12957 | And why? |
A12957 | Aske shifting Russians why they do forget, To hasten payment and discharge their debt, Or why they doe sufficient men dislike? |
A12957 | But is it lawfull to embase the true And auncient L ● … tine, with deuises new? |
A12957 | But shall I taxe your meanings, and condemne Inuisible designements? |
A12957 | Canst thou forswear''t, and thinke thy booke shall help? |
A12957 | Did it seeme honest, politicke, or wise, Humane, or vertuous to you, to deuise So bad a Proiect? |
A12957 | Dost thou or nature curse them with delay? |
A12957 | Doth not a Lawyer, that same Angell see Tempting diuines to flatter and belie The dead, which tempted him to falsifie The liuing truth? |
A12957 | Else art thou growne so couetous withall That thou canst nothing spare but mouldy sauce To welcome and deserue the Kings applause? |
A12957 | For who in Vertues troope was euer seene, who did( through goodnes) against passions fight Without the publike name of hipocrite? |
A12957 | Good Poets write whether they will or no And worthily: why therfore do ● … not they? |
A12957 | Hast thou not carefull been to multiply Thy precious wealth? |
A12957 | Hath thy good nature trusted many men And doe they all forget to pay thee now? |
A12957 | He can dispatch and Execute past amendment: but the meaning of aduise he knows no ● … for who can tell mee of a hangman that giues counsell? |
A12957 | I pray resolue me( Poets) doe you meane, To make that rampant and immodest Queane Your Muse, the Lawyers Mistres? |
A12957 | I will not wrong their holinesse: and why? |
A12957 | In her? |
A12957 | Is it not therefore a strict dealing when parents will not recompence an iniury, by a forgiuenes of that corruption which they themselues imparted? |
A12957 | Is it possible hee should escape damnation, when his whole trust and dealing is in great Security? |
A12957 | Is plenties date So much exspir''d that thou must imitate? |
A12957 | Is thy nobler sence Now punish''d for mispending former cost? |
A12957 | Is thy wealth inclosd Where none but Worthy men may it behold? |
A12957 | Let me demand your purpose: doe you meane To cleanse a dish with dish- clouts more vnclean? |
A12957 | Nam tecur aliquis sciat fuis ● … e? |
A12957 | Now haue you ended? |
A12957 | Or after long inu ● … ctiues who did kn ● … w So small detraction of the common 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A12957 | Or be thy riches by aduenture lost? |
A12957 | Or be thy worthy Poets cheapely sold As Bondslaues to detraction? |
A12957 | Or doth thy bounty turne to poysoned gall? |
A12957 | Or how shall wee condemn, if they bee suddenly ouerthrowne by the full necessity of destruction? |
A12957 | Or that thy Character( the purblind whelp Of a leane bitch) can licke away these markes From thee and thy maintaining fellow sharkes? |
A12957 | Quaenam te mala mens miselle Rauide Agit praecipitem in meas nugas? |
A12957 | Quia deus tibi n ● … n bene aduocatus, Vecordem parat exitare rixam? |
A12957 | Quid vis? |
A12957 | Schollers( you say) haue found thēselues agrieu''d ▪ Was this the fittest way to be relieu''d? |
A12957 | Shall we condemne his liberall act and loue, If thank- lesse Inuitants the same disproue? |
A12957 | So: Haue you done( deare Motley?) |
A12957 | Some haue enough to spend; but care not how: And so perhaps thy Poets: haue they so? |
A12957 | The Spring& autumne be fit times to cleere A fowle grosse body: then are they so foule That all times must the Lawyers art controule? |
A12957 | The first cānot thriue, because offences with Kinges out- weigh merits: Thē how distracted a thing is it, to preserue aduācement? |
A12957 | The last will neuer be good: So long as people doe but conduct their fauorites to the Scaffold, and cry Alas, it is pitty: but who can helpe it? |
A12957 | Then tell me some that know, doth common vse A worse or easier gaine then this produce? |
A12957 | Then what Profession shall I now disgrace? |
A12957 | Then( dearest Cambridge, best in my respect) Be these examples fitting to direct Thy ripe inuentions? |
A12957 | Thus greatnes doth preuaile: what remedie? |
A12957 | What if some others will thy feast abuse, Because it is of seu''rall kindes? |
A12957 | What prodigall and riotous expence Hath turn''d thee bankroupt? |
A12957 | What though a Lawyer doth expect his fee? |
A12957 | What will you answer? |
A12957 | What? |
A12957 | What? |
A12957 | What? |
A12957 | When I pronounce a Coward, it implies, Malice and spight be Cowards qualities: They are inseperate; and why? |
A12957 | Who rather gainefull vices doe condemne, Because they can not purchase gaines by them? |
A12957 | Why be they suffred to abuse their text; And make the Gospell speake against our Law? |
A12957 | Why crost? |
A12957 | Why doe I taxe, why doe I trouble men, Or why with noted crimes defile my Pen? |
A12957 | Why should''st thou striue or study to vpraise A labour, how to work some Welchmens praise? |
A12957 | Why then be some licentious Church- men vext? |
A12957 | Why then shall wee not be prouoked with such iniustice? |
A12957 | Will you bele ● … ue me? |
A12957 | Wilt thou then know thy selfe? |
A12957 | You proclaime Your meanings in each Tauerne: will you blame Those that beleiue you when you do reioyce That Lawyers be offended with your noise? |
A12957 | and I pray Is it not, shamefull brethren? |
A12957 | and by the consequent, why shall any man expect vertuous children? |
A12957 | and to multiply The times detraction with an open lye? |
A12957 | and to tutor thee Who art, if well awak''d, most fit and free To Tutor all the world? |
A12957 | can r ● … uiling 〈 ◊ 〉 Make Lawyers quiet? |
A12957 | dij te Damasippe deaeque Ob maledictum mox donēt tonsore; sed vnde Tam bene ne nosti? |
A12957 | doe you purpose to amend ou ● … life With bitter malice? |
A12957 | doth a Patient blame Physitians skill, Because th''Apothecary wrongs his bill? |
A12957 | go aske authoritie Why it protects peculiar vanitie? |
A12957 | in whose defence? |
A12957 | or can she remoue Her vaile; and will not her attracting loue Prouoke the wisest men to quarrell? |
A12957 | or did the parties dye, Or else run mad, on whom thou hast disposd Thy honour''d portions? |
A12957 | or what obedience may Fathers aske from such Children, more then from good Apprentices? |
A12957 | or what then? |
A12957 | qualibet esse noius optas? |
A12957 | resolue me, which of both Approches neerest to a ● … ewd vntroth? |
A12957 | resuse The Founders dignitie, because t is knowne Mens tastes and palates onely be their owne? |
A12957 | what satisfaction can, Written reproofes be for a vicious man? |
A12957 | what will you compose Able to make defence in vearse or p ● … ose?'' |
A12957 | wherfore then do you bark? |
A12957 | why curb''d? |